Laugaricio , at the castle hill of
Trenčín (178–179 AD) The winter camp of
Laugaricio (modern-day
Trenčín) lies near the northernmost line of the Roman hinterlands, the
limes Romanus. This was where the
Legio II Adiutrix fought and prevailed in a decisive battle over the tribe of Quadi in 179 AD. Laugaricio is the most northern remains of the presence of Roman soldiers in central
Europe. Soldiers of the Legio II Adiutrix carved the Roman inscription on the rock below today's castle. It reads:
Victoriae Augustorum exercitus, qui Laugaricione sedit, mil(ites) l(egiones) II DCCCLV. (Maximi)anus leg(atus leg)ionis II Ad(iutricis) cur(avit) f(aciendum) (To the
Victory of the army of the Augusti, stationed in Laugaricio, 855 legionaries of the II (dedicated this monument), the arrangements being undertaken by Maximian, legate of Legio II Adiutrix.)
Gerulata Gerulata was a Roman military camp from the second to fourth centuries. It is located near
Rusovce, on the right side of the Danube to the south of
Bratislava. The name was probably taken from the Celtic name for the location, which seems to have been near a ford over the river. The fortified camp was established in the
Flavian period, built by the X, XIV and XV Legions, and continued to be occupied and modified throughout the Roman period. The site has been subject to many years of archaeological research. Findings include inscribed stone votive altars and sepulchral monuments richly decorated with plant and figures. Many military artifacts have been discovered, as well as decorative jewelry, clasps and buckles. Jewels include gems, armlets, bracelets, pendants, rings, amulets. Coins include a complete sequence of Roman emperors apart from a short break in the first half of the third century. The findings also include everyday tools and implements – sickles, scissors, chisels, wrenches, clamps, fittings. The soldiers also left behind gambling chips and dice. The findings reflect the cosmopolitan nature of the Roman empire. Troops stationed here also campaigned on the lower Rhine and in Africa.
Roman,
Etruscan and
Greek deities are represented, as well as symbols from the cults of
Phrygia,
Syria, Africa and elsewhere. There are also early traces of Christianity.
Celemantia The fortress of
Celemantia is within the modern village of
Iža on the left side of the Danube, downstream from Gerulata.
Brigetio (modern
Szőny, Hungary) on the south bank of the Danube in Pannonia was a thriving urban center, as shown by the remains of temples, mineral spring spas and villas that contained elaborate mosaics, pottery and metalwork. Celementia was purely a military outpost, connected to Brigeto by a pontoon bridge that could be removed in wartime. Construction of the castellum of
Celemantia started in 171 AD on the orders of Marcus Aurelius. The fortress was burned down in 179 by the Marcomannic and Quadian tribes, but a stone fort was later built on the same site that lasted into Late Antiquity. Celemantia was a huge fortress. It was laid out as a square with sides about long, with rounded corners. The walls were up to wide and high. The camp had 20 towers with reinforced walls and two towers guarding gates in the center of the sides of the square. The camp buildings included barracks, stables and warehouses constructed on standard designs. The main buildings were entirely built of stone, but most buildings had stone foundations with adobe walls and tile roofs. The camp also contained tanks, wells, cisterns and ovens. A major renovation was undertaken in the fourth century. At the end of the fourth century the camp was destroyed and was not rebuilt. The Germanic Quadi occupied the ruins for a while, but by the middle of the fifth century it had been abandoned. In modern times, the camp was used as a quarry to build the fortress and other buildings in nearby
Komárno. Exploratory archaeological work was conducted in 1906-1909, with sporadic projects from then onwards. The layout and methods of construction have gradually been uncovered. Discoveries include coins and other metal objects, an ivory statuette of a comic actor, ceramic fragments, weapons, jewelry, tools and equipment. Stone sculptures show a diversity of religious beliefs.
Other locations • One of the first Roman military installations in the Middle Danube region is visible on the steep hill of
Devín, where the Morava flows into the Danube. This may be a small fortress or fortified tower. In the ruins of the Roman castle an iron cross was found in a tomb dating to the fourth century, the earliest relic of Christianity north of the Danube. • The small Roman forts in
Závod and
Suchohrad in the
Morava river region indicate an attempt to penetrate toward northern Bohemia-Moravia and the
Oder river, and perhaps into southern
Poland. • A Roman fort from the period of the Marcomannic wars has been excavated in
Stupava near Bratislava. Discoveries include documents, ceramics, jewelry, coins, fragments of glass vessels and economic tools. • The latest archaeological discoveries which have located new Roman enclosures in the surroundings of
Brno, Czech Republic led to the conclusion that the advance of Roman troops from Carnumtum could have run further to the north-east, into the region of the Slovak-Polish border. Indeed, recent archaeological excavations and aerial surveys have shown further locations in northeast
Moravia: three temporary Roman camps (possibly connected to the Laugaricio fort) situated in the foreland of the so-called
Moravian Gate (
Olomouc-Neředín,
Pravčice, Osek) have been partly corroborated, the former two clearly by digging. ==See also==