Trajan's Bridge | |
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![]() Artistic reconstruction (1907) | |
Coordinates | 44°37′26″N22°40′01″E / 44.623769°N 22.66705°E /44.623769; 22.66705 |
Crossed | Danube |
Locale | Drobeta-Turnu Severin (Romania),Kladovo (Serbia) |
Heritage status | Monuments of Culture of Exceptional Importance, andArchaeological Sites of Exceptional Importance (Serbia) |
Characteristics | |
Material | Wood, stone |
Total length | 1,135 m (3,724 ft) |
Width | 15 m (49 ft) |
Height | 19 m (62 ft) |
No. of spans | 20 masonry pillars |
History | |
Architect | Apollodorus of Damascus |
Construction start | 103 AD |
Construction end | 105 AD |
Collapsed | Superstructure destroyed byAurelian around 270 AD |
Statistics | |
Official name | Pontes with Trajan's Bridge |
Type | Archeological Site of Exceptional Importance |
Designated | 28 March 1981 |
Reference no. | AN 44[1] |
Location | |
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Trajan's Bridge (Romanian:Podul lui Traian;Serbian:Трајанов мост,romanized: Trajanov most), also calledBridge of Apollodorus over the Danube, was aRoman segmental arch bridge, the first bridge to be built over the lowerDanube and considered one of the greatest achievements inRoman architecture. Though it was only functional for 165 years, it is often considered to have been the longest arch bridge in both total span and length for more than 1,000 years.[2]
The bridge was completed in 105 AD and designed by EmperorTrajan's architectApollodorus of Damascus before theSecond Dacian War to allowRoman troops to cross the river.[3] Fragmentary ruins of the bridge'spiers are still in existence.
The bridge was situated east of theIron Gates, near the present-day cities ofDrobeta-Turnu Severin inRomania andKladovo inSerbia. Its construction was ordered by theEmperorTrajan as a supply route for the Roman legions fighting inDacia.
Construction of the bridge was part of a wider project, which included the digging of side canals so thatwhitewater rapids could be avoided to make the Danube safer for navigation enabling an effective river fleet, a string of defense posts and development of the intelligence service on the border.[4]
The remains of the embankment which protected the area during the construction of the canal (in a loop to the south of the Danube)[5] show the magnitude of the works. The 3.2 km (2.0 mi) long canal bypassed the problematic section of the river in an arch-like style.[6] Former canals eventually filled with sand, and emptyshells are regularly found in the ground.[7]
All these works, especially the bridge, served the purpose of preparing for theRoman invasion of Dacia, which ended with Roman victory in 106 AD. The effect of finally defeating the Dacians and acquiring theirgold mines was so great that Roman games celebrating the conquest lasted for 123 days, with 10,000 gladiators engaging in fights and 11,000 wild animals being killed during that period.[6]
The bridge was 1,135 m (3,724 ft) long (the Danube is now 800 m (2,600 ft) wide in that area), 15 m (49 ft) wide, and 19 m (62 ft) high, measured from the surface of the river. At each end was a Roman fort so that crossing the bridge was only possible through the camps.
On the south bank, at the modern village ofKostol near Kladovo, thePontes fort was built in 103, concurrently with the bridge, occupying several hectares. Remnants of the 40 m (130 ft) long castrum with thick ramparts are still visible today. Avicus (civilian settlement) grew up around it later. A bronze head of Emperor Trajan has been discovered in Pontes, part of a statue which was erected at the bridge entrance and is today kept in theNational Museum in Belgrade.
On the north bank is theDrobeta fort. It also had a bronze statue of Trajan.[7]
Apollodorus used wooden arches, each spanning 38 m (125 ft), set on twenty masonry pillars made of bricks, mortar, andpozzolana cement.[8][9] It was built unusually quickly (between 103 and 105), employing the construction of a woodencaisson for each pier.[10]
Apollodorus applied the technique of river flow relocation, using the principles set byThales of Miletus some six centuries beforehand. Engineers waited for a low water level to dig a canal, west of the modern downtown of Kladovo. The water was redirected 2 km (1.2 mi) downstream from the construction site, through the lowland ofKljuč region [sr], to the location of the modern village ofMala Vrbica. Wooden pillars were driven into the river bed in a rectangular layout, which served as thefoundation for the supportingpiers, which were coated with clay. The hollow piers were filled with stones held together bymortar, while from the outside they were built around withRoman bricks. The bricks can still be found around the village of Kostol, retaining the same physical properties that they had 2 millennia ago. The piers were 44.46 m (145.9 ft) tall, 17.78 m (58.3 ft) wide and 50.38 m (165.3 ft) apart.[6] It is considered today that the bridge construction was assembled on the land and then installed on the pillars. A mitigating circumstance was that the year the relocating canals were dug was very dry and the water level was quite low. The river bed was almost completely drained when the foundation of the pillars began. There were 20 pillars in total in an interval of 50 m (160 ft).Oak wood was used and the bridge was high enough to allow ship transport on the Danube.[7]
The bricks also have a historical value, as the members of theRoman legions andcohorts which participated in the construction of the bridge carved the names of their units into the bricks. Thus, it is known that work was done by the legions ofIV Flavia Felix,VII Claudia,V Macedonica andXIII Gemina and the cohorts of I Cretum, II Hispanorum, III Brittonum and I Antiochensium.[6]
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A Roman memorial plaque ("Tabula Traiana"), 4 metres wide and 1.75 metres high, commemorating the completion of Trajan'smilitary road is located on the Serbian side facing Romania near Ogradina, 29 km west of the bridge. In 1972, when theIron Gate I Hydroelectric Power Station was built (causing the water level to rise by about 35 m), the plaque was moved from its original location, and lifted to the present place. It reads:
The text was interpreted byOtto Benndorf to mean:
The Tabula Traiana was declared aMonument of Culture of Exceptional Importance in 1979, and is protected by theRepublic of Serbia.
When the plan for the future hydro plant and its reservoir was made in 1965, it was clear that numerous settlements along the banks would be flooded in both Yugoslavia and Romania, and that historical remains, including the plaque, would also be affected.Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts urged for the plaque to be preserved and the government accepted the motion. The enterprise entrusted with the task of relocation was the mining company "Venčac" as its experts previously participated in the relocation of theAbu Simbel temple inEgypt.[11]
First idea was to leave the plaque at its position and to build thecaisson around it but the calculations showed this would not work. The idea of cutting the plaque in several smaller pieces in order to be moved was abandoned due to the quality of the rock of which it was made. The proposition of lifting it with the floating elevator "Veli Jože" was discarded, too. The motion of cutting the table in one piece and placing it somewhere else was rejected as the plaque would lose its authenticity.[11]
In the end it was decided to dig in a new bed into the rock 22 m (72 ft) above the plaque's original location. The plaque was then cut in one piece with the parts of the surrounding rock and road. After being cut with the cable saws, the 350 tons heavy chunk was lifted to the new bed. Works began in September 1967 and were finished in 1969.[11]
The wooden superstructure of the bridge was dismantled by Trajan's successor,Hadrian, presumably in order to protect the empire from barbarian invasions from the north.[12] The superstructure was destroyed by fire.[7]
The remains of the bridge reappeared in 1858 when the level of the Danube hit a record low due to the extensive drought.[7] The twenty pillars were still visible.
In 1906, theCommission of the Danube decided to destroy two of the pillars that were obstructing navigation.
In 1932, there were 16 pillars remaining underwater, but in 1982 only 12 were mapped by archaeologists; the other four had probably been swept away by water. Only the entrance pillars are now visible on either bank of the Danube,[13] one in Romania and one in Serbia.[7]
In 1979, Trajan's Bridge was added to theMonument of Culture of Exceptional Importance, and in 1983 onArchaeological Sites of Exceptional Importance list, and by that it is protected by the Republic of Serbia.
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