The Romans reorganize Dacia as a Roman …
Years: 106 - 106
The Romans reorganize Dacia as a Roman province and build another capital at a distance of forty kilometers from the old Sarmizegetuza, naming it Colonia Ulpia Traiana Dacica Augusta Sarmizegetuza.
The province includes the modern Romanian regions of Transylvania, Banat and Oltenia, and temporarily Muntenia and southern Moldova, but not the nearby regions of Moesia.
A large part of the population has been either exterminated or fled to regions north of the Carpathians.
As a consequence of this depopulation, Roman colonists are brought in to cultivate the land and work the gold mines alongside the remaining Dacians.
Besides the Roman troops, these are mainly first- or second-generation Roman colonists from Noricum or Pannonia, later to be supplemented with colonists from other provinces: South Thracians (from the provinces of Moesia or Thrace) and settlers from the Roman provinces of Asia Minor.
Roman influence is broadened by the construction of important roads; …
Locations
People
Groups
- Dacians, or Getae, or Geto-Dacians
- Dacia, Kingdom of
- Asia (Roman province)
- Pannonia (Roman province)
- Noricum (Roman province)
- Thracia (Roman province)
- Moesia Inferior (Roman province)
- Roman Empire (Rome): Nerva-Antonine dynasty
- Dacia, Roman
Topics
- Classical antiquity
- Roman colonization
- Roman Age Optimum
- Pax Romana
- Dacian War, Second
- Sarmizegetusa, Battle of
