Tibiscum

Tibiscum
Tibiscum is located in Romania
Tibiscum
Location within Romania
Alternative name(s)Tibisco, Tivisco, Tibiscus, Tibiskon, Tiriskon [1]
Known also asCastra of Jupa
Founded during the reign ofTrajan
Foundedc. 101 AD
Abandonedc. 6th-7th century AD
Attested byTabula Peutingeriana
Previous fortificationDacian
Place in the Roman world
ProvinceDacia
Administrative unitDacia Apulensis
Administrative unitDacia Superior
Structure
— Stone structure —
Size and area307 m × 170 m (5.4 ha)
Stationed military units
Cohorts
I Sagittariorum, I Vindelicorum milliaria equitata[2]
Numeri
Maurorum Tibiscensium,[3] Palmyrenorum Tibiscensium[4][3]
Location
Coordinates45°27′59″N 22°11′22″E / 45.4663°N 22.1895°E / 45.4663; 22.1895
Altitudec. 180 m
TownJupa
CountyCaraș-Severin
Country Romania
Reference
RO-LMICS-I-s-A-10805 [4]
RO-RAN51038.01 [4]
Site notes
Recognition National Historical Monument
ConditionRuined
Excavation dates1924–1925, 1980–1990
ArchaeologistsDoina Benea, G. G. Mateescu, Ioan Boroș

Tibiscum (Tibisco, Tibiscus, Tibiskon) was a Dacian town mentioned by Ptolemy, later a Roman fort and municipium.[5][6] The ruins of the ancient settlement are located in Jupa, near Caransebeș, Caraș-Severin County, Romania. The Roman settlement here was one of the most important vestiges of classical antiquity in Banat.

Located at the junction of two of the most important imperial roads that connected the capital Ulpia Traiana Sarmizegetusa with Dierna and Lederata, the city and the fort developed due to the fertile plain of the Timiş river and the commercial and strategic position occupied.

The remains of important buildings and workshops from the Roman fort and from the Roman civil settlement of Tibiscum are visible.

Western Dacia forts
Plan of fort and Vicus
  1. ^ Schütte 1917.
  2. ^ Tactica, strategie si specific de lupta la cohortele equitate din Dacia Romana, de Petru Ureche
  3. ^ a b Tibiscum
  4. ^ a b c "Castrul şi vicus-ul roman (municipiul Tibiscum) de la Jupa - "Cetate"". National Archaeological Record of Romania (RAN). ran.cimec.ro. 16 October 2012. Retrieved 3 March 2014.
  5. ^ Ptolemy & 140 AD, III 8,4.
  6. ^ Olteanu, Ptolemy's Dacia.