the via egnatia: rome`s traverse of a multi
Transcription
the via egnatia: rome`s traverse of a multi
From Durres to Istanbul, through Albania, Yugoslavia, Greece and Turkey, may be traced the Egnatian Way. Completed in the second century B.C., the military road served as a tenuous link through the Roman Balkan provinces, had its key sector in Macedonia, and has today military and political significance. The theme concerns the itinerary, locale, development and persistent importance of this ancient routeway. The Military and Political Prologue THE VIA EGNATIA: ROME'S TRAVERSE OF A MULTI-CULTURAL MARCHLAND C. Philip Curti* 'Dr. Curti is Professor o f Geography at No rth Texas State University, Denton , Texas. Where the Balkans narrow between the Ionian and Thracian Seas from present Durres to Salonika, is part of the shortest land-sea route from Rome to Istanbu l. On Otranto's western shore, north of Brindisi at the ancient terminus of the Via Traiana from Rome, lies the site of Gnathia which gave its name to the trans-Balkan frontier trail. From Gnathia to Apollonia was the shortest water-crossing between Italia and IIliricum. During the fourth century B.C., the Athenian empire encircled the Aegean Sea, Epirus tended to be independent, and Thessaly allied to Athens. Northward limits of Athenian control on the mainland approximately the latitude of Mount Olympus, and beyond the Haliacmon was Illyria and Macedonia. One of Alexander's first tasks was to control Balkan waist from Apollonia to the Hebrus, enforcing subservience of peoples such as the Paconians, Agrianis and Thracians and using those marchlands to exclude inroads from Illyria and Tribali along the lower Danube. As a result of the first Punic War (238 B.C.), Rome acquired a foothold across the Otranto in the Apollonia area closing the Macedonian door to the Adriatic.! Having established this beachhead, lines of communication were a necessary pre-requi site to firm control of the lands south of the Dan9 ube and incorporation into the East Roman Empire. Bunbury notes that Strabo's knowledge of the interior, particularly the ethnological relationships of peoples, was " extremely obscure"2and that general information of the wild tribes was limited to observing that "they were imperfectly subdued.,,3 Whereas Apollonia was an effective military site controlling the lowland access northward from Epirus, the deep water protected by the peninsula at Dyrrhachium (modern Durres) also had the advantage of being strategically safer for naval and mercantile operations by being protected by the military post at Apollonia on the south, and by its easier access to the Scumbi (Genusus) through the Candavian Mountains to Lake Lychnites (Ohrid), and for a northward penetration via the Drin into the Pristina plain. Thus a two-pronged thrust could be made to the Morava-Vardar : the more northerly would penetrate Moesian lands, the subjugation of which was not accomplished until B.C. 29 and had to be a secondary action to clasping the Balkan waist with a firm military routeway to the head of the Gulf of Therma . Clodiana was a natural meeting point of the road s from Apollonia and Epidamnus en route upstream the Genusus . Two principal alternatives appeared : one could move south and east to reach the Eordaicus tributary of the Apsus to flank southward Lakes Ohrid and Prespa, then following the chain of lakes from Kastoria to Edessa. The more direct route eastward had Cl sharp col above 1000 meters at about 3 miles from the west shore of Lake Ohrid : the clockwise encircling route north of Lake Ohrid led to lowland more quickly in the Struga basin and the pass to Bitola was easy to traverse. During the third century B.C., Roman interest in ea stward territorial expan10 sion led to the construction of the Via Egnatia, the Roman routeway from Dyrrhachium and Apollonia in present Albania, to Thessalonika and Byzantium by the strategic Propontis. Classic geographers concerned themselves considerably with topographical descriptions of the wild and barbarian Balkans, and Erathosthenes estimated the distance between the Adriatic and Aegean as 900 stadia (90 geographical miles) and "Polybius, fol lowing the line of the Egnatian Way, gave the distance from Apollonia to Thessalonica as 267 Roman miles or 2136 stadia.'" Later than the Via Traiana, the Via Appia was completed in 312 B.C., and it was not until almost two centuries later, that the Via Egnatia provided a satisfactory routeway to the Hebrus River, the modern Maritza, beyond which the Egnatian Way was never demarcated. The Roman completion of their military roads contributed materially to geographical knowledge, for they marked and measured miles along them, but no conversion was accomplished from itinerary miles to sextant-computed miles: The routeway was designed for rapid courier and military service, and shortened the sea distance of 800 miles and 20 days from Brindisium around the stormy Malean Promontory at the south of the Peloponessus, to Thessalonika on the Gulf of Therma, to a sealand route of about 250 miles, traversible in forced marches in 12 days. The Macedonian March/and This remote isolated land, not unexpectedly, became a refuge for migrant peoples some of whose languages have yet to be traced with certainty. One of the archaeological sites in the Macedonian plain near modern Nikomedia, is identified as the oldest dated Neolithic community in Europe.· Estab- \>- , .. N JO • • .... .... J~~ '00 2000 CLASSICAL TOWNS MODERN TOWNS o 11m mllu - , P, O'• . lUI lished about 6220 B.C, there are clear cultural affinities with Hacilimon in Asia Minor, Hassuna in Iraq and the Pannonian plain to the north. Evidence of the inspiration of domestication from the Middle East through mixed farming and herding, sheep and goats, wheat and barley, suggests that migrant folk settled very early in the Macedonian plain.' Since that time, the major infiltrations have been from the north: after the 6th century B.C, entry via the Morava-Vardar and the Pelagonic passways, has admitted Turanic groups, followers of Attila the Hun, Serbs, Bulgars, and Albanians, while Greeks and Osmani Turks filtered northward to complete Europe's most racially and ethnically complex region. The Greek core area being isolated in the south of the Balkan peninsula would vitiate lands north of the Haliacmon to being more than a marchland, but the Macedonians whose homeland was a fertile plain encircled by a horseshoe of highlands, between 600 and 340 B.C, exhibited a political ascendancy, making it a target for incursions by indigent mountain peoples and major intrusions through the Pelagonic and Axius passways from the interior. This was evidenced by being the route of the Galatians in 279 B.C and by " the hard tussles which the Antigonid kings had to sustain against the Dardanian invaders from the northwestern highlands."· Thus, from the time of Philip II, Macedonian kings indulged in military essays thrusting to the Danube (Alexander, 335 B.C) and to the Adriatic (Cassander 314 B.C) . After Rome's acquisition of the Illyrian bridgehead in 229 B.C the Romans waited until mid-century to expand and consolidate their Macedonian holdings, and it was the establishment of the Via Egnatia as a logistic line of support that had to 12 precede a military accomplishment here. Much had been surveyed durfng Roman efforts to subdue Macedonia and the tumbled lands north to the Danube, but then as now, this was the most wild and unknown part of Europe, and the legions were constantly subjected to guerrilla attacks from tribes in IIlyricum, Moesia and Thrace. Ancient trails and footpaths were systematically graded and their surfaces hardened to permit all-weather use. The myriad of meandering tracks would not have evolved into the vitally strategic artery without the military and political planning of the burgeoning Roman Empire. The Unifying Road It was to this multi-cultural area that Roman influence was to be, at least temporarily, a unifying factor. The rewards were enticing. There was the military need to consolidate the lands south of the Danube; a military road to the strategic narrow ways of the Bosphorus-Marmora-Hellespontwould place Rome closer to Byzantium and the Persian Road to the Fertile Crescent. The region was not without its economic wealth: the horses of Thrace were famous from Homeric times; they provided cavalry for Philip the Great and Bucephalus for Alexander: Mount Pangeus had wealth in gold; the plains of Phillippi, the scene of the BrutusOctavius battle, was near tin and silver mines. The coniferous forests provided timber and tar for ship building, as well as resin for cough medicines prescribed by Greek physicians. Epirote dogs were sought for their hunting skills and good clay was available for brick making. The great Roman highways were extended into the Balkans in 145 B.C and joined the Persian Road at the Bosphorus about 130 B.C So far there seems to be little evidence of archaeological research involving the cutting across of sections of Roman road beds in the Mediterranean area away from the major sites of Roman construction . Most findings appear to be consistent with the description of Stratiu s (A.D . 90) of the con struction of the Via Domitiana in Campania. " The first task," wrote Strati us, " is to begin the furrow (sulci) and to open out the track, and then with deep digging to hollow out the soil. Next fill the hollow trench with other materials and prepare a lap (grenium) on which the road surface may be laid, lest the ground give way or the spiteful earth provide an unreliable road bed for the rammed blocks. Then with closeset curb stones (umbones) on both sides, and with many cramps, they bind the road together."lo Where traffic was less, particularly where courier, foot traffic and lighter vehicles predominated, the road material was laid on the original ground, without any attempt at embanking. Road embankments would be more liable to erosion, would need ramps to reach the higher levels from crossing tracks, and one may assume that roads in the Balkans were seldom raised above the natural terrain except where marshy or flood-susceptible land had to be traversed . Romans were never so rigid in their routeways to insist on straightness at the expense of unnecessary bridges or steep grades. Th e Itin erary The routeway of the Via Egnatia from the Adriatic, first had to climb to a 1300 meter col in the northern Pindus Range between the Jablanica and Kamia ridges that reach almost 2300 meters in elevation . A rapid drop and then a skirting of Lake Ohrid brought travelers to Heraclea (modern Bitola ) and then the Florina basin drained by the upper Haliacmon southwards, and by the Crna tributary of the Vardar, no rthwards. In the Lyncestis plain on the watershed between the headwaters of the Haliacmon and the Erigon (Crna) , there seem to be three minor variants on the route from Heraclea to the Keiii Pass. The itineraries cited in Leake, Itinerarium Antonini, Tabula Peulillgeriana , ltinerarium Hierosolymitanum are unclear, and in the field the indications are that the shortest-line-of sight route was less favored than the lower more easily traversible flatlands:' Here still, pastoral elements predominate, but maize, wheat, tobacco and some sturdier fruits such as pears and apples occupy the basin floors where the drainage is more positive. The sharp ridge of the Voras Mountains required the Via Egnatia to make a steep twisting climb near Vevi to the Kelli Pass at 1000 meters elevation above Lake Ostrovo (ancient Bigorritis), which has no surface outlet, but probably feeds the miniature Niagara at the springs and falls of Edessa. To this point there are fewer than 10 persons per square mile on either side of the Roman routeway, except in towns. East of Edessa, below the falls, above which there is now a hydroelectric plant, begin the plains of Macedonia where irrigation water is plentiful and the chill winds of winter are less hostile to human habitation, and the fertile core area that formed the logistic base of Alexander's Empire is one of the most agriculturally productive in the Balkans. The fields are often hedged by fruit trees, plums, walnuts, almonds and vines, and rather rarely, the olive. Larger towns such as Edessa and Yiannitsa are on the foothill apron where streams are most persistent and Pella, the birthplace of Alexander, was similarly sited, then within a league of the shoreline at the estuary of the Therma. 13 = The marshy shore of the Axius-silting Thermic Gulf at Salonika was not a principal terminus of the Egnatian Way; rather was the ancient Argolis, where with Amphipolis on the Strymon, was deeper water to the east of the Chalcidian neck and a sheltered terminus for the trans-Aegean voyage to Troy. The Via Egnatia continues past Phillippi across the Nestos, beyond Xanthi to the Hebrus, but never seems to have been properly surveyed or completed to Byzantium to the Bosphorus. To the Romans, the vital section of this road ended where the rich Macedonian plains were traversed, where the entry to the Vadar gap to Skopje was controlled, and where a port existed from which punitive operations in the Hellespontine area could be pursued. Whether it was Philip the First or Second of Macedon , or his more renowned son Alexander, or whoever wished to strike at Athens, the sensitive grain artery from the Scythian Plains through the Hellespont to Attica, had to be severed. Thus Alexander and Macedonia had also to become a naval power. When the Romans fought Rhodes, they denied them the lumber they needed to the Rhodian economic and naval ruin. " The Romans, brilliant geograp hers and military strategists that they were, realized the importance of the Macedonian march lands. They established a military all-weather rightof-way with way-stations one day's march apart with strong military posts, such as at Heraclea and Pella . The latter was strategically located on the southern slopes of the Emathian hills between Edessa's springs, the Axius gateway to the Vardar-Morava gap and overlooking the Macedonian grain fields. These major military posts, by exacting levy from the local landsca pe, became magnificent centers of culture, emulating in their art and architecture much of Athens and Pompeii . 14 Epilogue and Prospect The Egnatian Way was based on ancient foot and donkey trails; it was most difficult from the Adriatic to Lake Ohrid of salmon-trout fame, had its key section from the Pons Servilius at the water exit of Lake Ohrid, to the root of the Athos peninsula at Amphipolis which port presented the shortest sea route from Macedonia to Byzantium or Troy. Much of the key section, between Struga and Salonika is now followed closely by narrow asphalted roads. The Via Egnatia formed one of the key arteries of Rome's Empire, and today is being exploited by the touristconscious government as the " Greek Road," meeting the Yugoslav border at Nikki . Ancient cities and Roman military posts and way stations now function in modern guise, and the persistent significance of the Egnatian Way is forcibly impressed upon the traveller who gives way to the Albanian trucks en route to the Free Port at Thessaloniki near where Alexander's port and birthplace is now a dozen miles from the Thermic Gulf. There is also the realization that should the Soviet fleet control the Kithrai Channel, the line of communication from the Strait of Otranto to the Gulf of Therma may be the only remaining option for access to the Dardanelles. The major unifying factor in this marchland of multi-cultural complexity, is the Via Egnatia, and could be instrumental in generating a Pax Balkania or controlling military and political penetration of the Mediterranean . Near the terminus of this transBalkan route on the Otranto Strait, the sheltered anchorage east of Corcyra harbors U. S. and Italian visiting warships. Soviet vessels voyage to the narrow seaways of the Aegean, skirting the easterly reaches of the old Roman road. The po rtent of the naval activity contra sts with the linking pastoral peace that characterizes the ancient Egnati an Way. 'Dr. Curti is Professor of Geography at North Texas State Universi ty . The paper was presented at the Annua l Meeting of the Association at Santa Cruz in 1970 a nd is a sequel to field work in the Ba lkans duri ng 1967 and 1969. II ) William R. Shepherd, Historical Atlas, (New Yo rk: Henry Holt and Company, 1911), p. 35. (' ) E. H. Bunbury, Histo ry 01 Ancient Geography, (New York : Dove r Publications, 1959). Vol. (), Chap . XVII, p.264. (3) Ibid. p. 265. (' ) Ibid. p. 27. (S) Loe. Cit. (' ) Robert Rodden , "An Early Neolithic Sett lement in Greece," Scientilic American, Vol. 212, No.4 (1965), p. 83. J. E. Dixon , et a/., " Obsidian and the Origins of Trade," Scientific American, Vol. 218, No . 3 (1968), p.44. ( 8 ) M. Cary, The Geographical Background to Greek and Roman Histo ry, (Oxford. Clarendon Press, 1949), p. 302. (9) E. G. Semple, Geography 01 the Mediterranean Region, (New York. Henry Holt , 1931 ), p. 277. ( 10 ) C. Singe r, et al. , A History 01 Ancient Technology, (New York: Oxford University Press, 1956), Vol. II , p.500. ( 11 ) Wm . M . Leake, Travels in No rthern Greece, (Lond o n : 1843), p. 39. Leake notes (he difficully of deducin g exact portions of the road between Lychnidus (Ohrid) and Edessa, but adds, " The road crossed a bridge name d Pons Servilli which could have bee n no other than a bridge over (he Orin, ancie nt Orilla, at its issue from Lake Lychnitus." The re is no present visib le evidence of the ancient bridge today. Lake Ohrid has decreased in size and a modern weir and concrete walls curb Lake Oh rid' s outlet. (1' ) Wm . M. Leake, Via Mifililris Romanorum Egnatiae qua IIliricum Macedonia et Thra ce, (Tubingen, T.l.F. Tate l, 1841 ), pp. 1-4. (13 ) Semple, op. cit. , p. 277. (7 ) 15