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Antonine Itinerary XXVI

 

Other names

Via 26 del Itinerario de Antonino
Chronology
Later Roman
Link
200 / 400
Description

The Antonine Itinerary is one of the most famous Roman "itineraries" where the main communication roads of the Roman Empire were collected in a series of lists of stop points and the distances that separated them. Its name does not seem to be related to Emperor Antonine Pius, but rather to Marcus Aurelius Severus Antoninus Augustus, known as Caracalla, who ruled the Roman Empire from 211 to 217.

The Antonini Itinerarium is most likely based on official documents, probably from a study organized by Julius Caesar and developed during the reign of August. We do not know for sure about the author. It is considered probable that the date of the original edition is at the beginning of the third century, while what has come to us probably corresponds to the times of Diocletian.

The via Item ab Asturica Caesaraugustam is a long route of 497 mp which links the cities of Caesaraugusta and Asturica Augusta. This path is interesting because it follows a long route connecting those cities with the territory where were located the city of Titulcia. This route has 23 mansiones and is also known as Via 6 following the nomenclature created by Saavedra (1862).

Comments

Item ab Asturica Caesaraugustam

Bibliography
  • Saavedra, E. (1862): Discursos leídos ante la Real Academia de la Historia en la recepción pública de Don Eduardo Saavedra, el día 28 de diciembre de 1862.
  • Blazquez, A. (1892) “Nuevo estudio sobre el Itinerario de Antonino”. Boletín de la Real Academia de la Historia. Tomo 21, Año 1892. Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes.
  • Besnier, M.: “Itineraires épigraphiques d´Espagne”, Bulletin Hispanique, 26, 1924, págs. 5-26
  • Cuntz, O. (1929) Itineraria Romana. Berlín.
  • Roldán, JM. (1975) Itineraria hispana. Fuentes para el estudio de las vías romanas en la Península Ibérica, Valladolid-Granada, 1975
  • Reed, N. (1978) «Pattern and Purpose in the Antonine Itinerary», The American Journal of Philology, vol. 99, nº 2 (1978), pp. 228-254
  • Löhberg, B. (2006) Das Ïtinerarium provinciarum Antonini Augusti. Ein kaiserzeitliches Straßenverzeichnis des Römischen Reiches. Überlieferung, Strecken, Kommentare, Karten. Berlin: Frank & Timme, 2006.
  • Arias, G. (2004): Repertorio de caminos de la Hispania romana, Ronda (2ªedición)
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