Talk:Trajan

Latest comment: 2 months ago by Emmstel in topic Ten Jewish Martyrs
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So much for "weak eyes"

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IN TRANSCRIBING INSCRIPTIONS SMALL CAPS LOOK BETTER AND ARE PRECISELY THE SAME SIZE AS REGULAR MINUSCULE.
Small caps in transcribing inscriptions look better and are precisely the same size as regular minuscule.

>He was born on September 18, 66 A.D, in the city of Italica. When he became >emperor 45 years later, he thus became the first Roman Emperor not born in >Italy....

Wasn't Claudius born at Lyon in France?

--- Trajan's "provincial family," the Ulpii, was originally from Italy and settled in Spain not long after the Second Punic War. They had been active in Roman politics for centuries, and I doubt anyone thought too much about Trajan being born outside Italy when he became Emperor. It was no different than if a U.S. President born in California came to Washington to begin his term. No one would say that was "bad" because California wasn't part of the U.S. until 1846.

Trajan's family was active in Roman politics for centuries after his reign, as well. Aurelian's wife was a member of that family. John

Is this appropriate: "While many consider Trajan to be an example of how Rome accepted the ideals from all over the empire, many consider the rise of a Spaniard to the top of Roman politics to be the beginning of the fall of true 'Roman' society. Wouldn't it be more informative instead to mention how utterly Romanized Hispania Baetica was? --Wetman 04:15, 25 Jun 2005 (UTC)

As per the discussion here, I'm going to remove the sentence until someone can produce a reference stating its significance. For one thing, Claudius was not "Italian", he was Roman, which is quite a different thing. For another, this idea that Trajan came from an extra-Roman "foreign" provincial family, regardless of where they'd lived for the past century or so, is simply inaccurate, as another poster has already pointed out. Binabik80 18:26, 3 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Iran/Persia

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In the historical context of this article, is it really appropriate to link "Persia" to Iran? -- Jmabel | Talk 06:31, Apr 16, 2005 (UTC)

The Roman enemy beyond the Tigris at this point were the Parthians.--Wetman 04:15, 25 Jun 2005 (UTC)

"Gate of Trajan" or "Trajan's Gate"

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The article on John Hunyadi mentions this place (and has a link to it):

Hunyadi, at the head of the vanguard, crossed the Balkans through the Gate of Trajan, captured Nish, defeated three Turkish pashas, and, after taking Sofia, united with the royal army and defeated Murad II at Snaim.

Could anyone tell me where this gate lies? Adam78 13:03, 18 Jun 2005 (UTC) Maybe there are the IRON GATES the place where the Tajan Bridge wasCristianChiritaGa

It is the so called "iron gate." . It is (was) a deep, tight valley where the danube river passes. It is after the Danube has passed

Belgrade. Trajan conquered it out of logistic necessity before he started the first dacian war. He built a road alongside the Danube river passing the so called iron gate. He had to construct the road in form of a balcony into the rock. User: Primitivus; 23:55; 24. Dec.2007 (CEST)

Major anon uncited additions

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Recently, someone anonymously added enormous content to this article, without citing a single source. This was way beyond what someone would know offhand. Please, anonymous contributor, if you are reading this, add some indication of your sources!

Meanwhile, if this is not clarified: could someone who knows this area better than me please have a look and tell us if this looks like probable copyvio or not? -- Jmabel | Talk June 29, 2005 05:54 (UTC)

It´s a clear copyright violation, see: http://www.roman-emperors.org/trajan.htm. Parthian war and other sections were simply copied. I have make a Revert to Wetman, 25. June.

There is some wrong historical information

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As I know, Trajan never conquered Dacia completely, I think he conquered something like 15 - 20 %, winning the wars because he took the capital and split the country. But Dacia was not conquered completely and was not part of the Roman Empire.


The romans destroyed the dacian kingdom, althoug, didn't conquer all the ancient territory of the dacians, they took the main and best regions and for two centuries Dacia was roman province, with many roman colonies, very important for the Empire because her gold mines. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 217.124.133.70 (talkcontribs) 13 Jan 2006


While it is true that Trajan didn't completely conquer Dacia and that its gold mines were valuable, after the death of Constantine the Great the Romans pulled out of Dacia and never returned. The constant invasions of Gothic tribes was to much for the Roman army too handle. --Sgusm (talk) 17:36, 10 September 2010 (UTC)Reply

Pederasty

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Recently added: "Dio Cassius reports that Trajan drank heavily and was a pederast, but in his relations with boys he harmed no one." Probably accurate, a citation would be nice, but why quote Dio Cassius on this relatively minor matter and not on (what I remember from maybe 30 years ago to be) his wide-ranging praise of Trajan? Or do I mis-remember? -- Jmabel | Talk 01:37, 22 January 2006 (UTC)Reply

  • My reading of this passage is that it is supportive of Trajan, rather than deprecatory. As for this being minor, I think that is a matter of opinion. I think it is quite important, it humanizes the man and also counters the tendency of modern writing to depict the ancients, or any alien topic, in a light making them seem "just like us." Haiduc 03:06, 22 January 2006 (UTC)Reply


Small Head

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At the beginning of the article say "He has an abnormally small head."

Well i think that in the statue he can look so, but, i think that there is no other source about this. Can be vandalism in the article?

-Fco —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 80.58.205.34 (talkcontribs) 10 November 2006.

Ten Jewish Martyrs

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Anyone know anything about Trajan being the Caesar during the incident of the Ten Martyrs? Valley2city 20:05, 26 November 2006 (UTC)Reply

No, this event took place supposedly during the Jewish revolt of 70AD. But there are discrepanceies as the article about the Ten Martyrs names Shimon ben Gamliel as one of them and he was executed in 70AD as well as a Rabbi Akiva who died circa 135AD. In 70AD Vespasian was emperor. The question remains wether it was Vespasian or his son Titus who are meant by this story. And in 135 Hadrian was emperor and Trajan was already dead for 18 years. As the story most likely took place during the First Jewish-Roman War, Hadrian seems unlikely and Trajan impossible. -- fdewaele, 28 November 2006, 20:10



Reading the wikipedia article on the Hebrew Calendar, I came across this reference to Trajan:

Alexandrian Jewish calendar

The Ethiopic Christian computus (used to calculate Easter) describes in detail a Jewish calendar which must have been used by Alexandrian Jews near the end of the third century. These Jews formed a relatively new community in the aftermath of the annihilation (by murder or enslavement) of all Alexandrian Jews by Emperor Trajan at the end of the 115–117 Kitos War. Their calendar used the same epacts in nineteen year cycles that were to become canonical in the Easter computus used by almost all medieval Christians, both those in the Latin West and the Hellenist East. Only those churches beyond the eastern border of the Byzantine Empire differed, changing one epact every nineteen years, causing four Easters every 532 years to differ. [Emphasis Added]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hebrew_calendar

But when I read the entry on Trajan, I find no mention of this. Is the accuracy of that statement disputed?

All thoughts appreciated. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.175.40.215 (talk) 05:21, 14 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Probably all the extant Ethiopian computus manuscripts were copied at various times later than the sixteenth century, even if they contain tables with data for much earlier centuries. On the basis of the occurrence of calendrical data from as early as the third century, Otto Neugebauer ([1]) assumed (and repeated it in a number of his publications as if it were established fact) that the Ethiopian Church borrowed the Alexandrian computus near the end of the third century. His supposition was and is unwarranted (the Ethiopian computus facilitates the calculation of dates even going back as far as the supposed beginning of the world), and it is also prima facie improbable. Most likely, the initial borrowing of the computus from Alexandria occurred during the fifth century (or later, but the question requires more research and discussion, I believe). The Ethiopian computus displays much more interest in Jewish calendrical matters (especially the Jewish holidays and their dates) than the Alexandrian computus did (so far as we know). During the medieval centuries, the Ethiopians made Ethiopic translations of Egyptian Christian literature written in Arabic, some of it including significant amounts of information about the calendars of various nations and religions. Possibly this was the source of information about the Jewish calendar that one finds in the Ethiopic computus tradition. But there is also a small branch of Judaism in Ethiopia (called "Beit Israel") from which Christian computists might have obtained information across many centuries. All of these topics still require specialized research, including editing and translating primary Ethiopic sources. But in sum, it is unlikely that information about the Jewish calendar in the Ethiopian computus tradition was based directly on information from third-century Jewish sources in Alexandria. And in any case, the passage from the article "Hebrew calendar" that is referred to in the preceding comment is no longer to be found there. And so, this topic here under "Trajan" is now closed, in my opinion. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Emmstel (talkcontribs) 21:24, 7 September 2024 (UTC)Reply

Much vandalized

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So are, like, 90% of the edits to this article in the last few months either vandalism or reversion of vandalism? Or is it even more than that? - Jmabel | Talk 06:15, 18 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Categorization

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Isn't the inclusion in Category:Andalusian people anachronistic? This would be like including Immanuel Kant as Russian because Königsberg is now Russian Kaliningrad, or calling King David a Palestinian. - Jmabel | Talk 23:06, 23 December 2006 (UTC)Reply

Hadrian's bringing of the adoption news

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In fact, Hadrian was not, according to the sources, the one to bring Traian news of his adoption. He wanted to very much and tried to, but was stopped by various people who were out to get him. There was something about sabotage to his chariot I believe. This is according to Suetonius, whom I suspect is usually wrong, but it's the information that exists, so the wikipedia article should reflect that. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 69.157.191.94 (talkcontribs) 17:17, 29 April 2007 (UTC).Reply

I suspect you're thinking of the life of Hadrian in the Historia Augusta, which reports that Servianus attempted to delay Hadrian from delivering the news and that Hadrian's chariot was sabotaged, but that Hadrian still got to Trajan first on foot (2.5–6). Ronald Syme (Tacitus, pp. 600–601) thinks that the story comes from Hadrian's autobiography and was intended to justify the later execution of Servianus. EALacey 17:53, 29 April 2007 (UTC)Reply

I must agree, all signs point to generally untrustworthy statements as being eminently useless from the Historia Augusta. I have actually just read a reference to this story in "The Limits of Empire" by B. Isaac. This sort of anecdote surely falls into that category. Lazarus Plus (talk) 22:46, 5 May 2010 (UTC)Reply

Tiny freaking head

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Good gods, he's got such a tiny head! It's disturbingly freaky! Was that how his head was in history? Someone should start a section in his article about his tiny head! —Preceding unsigned comment added by AndarielHalo (talkcontribs) 01:13, 6 September 2007 (UTC)Reply

Since when does the apparently small size of a historical figure's head have any significance? Trajan was one of the more respected Roman Emperors, so why the random talk about the size of his skull? AndyB66 (talk) 23:08, 22 September 2010 (UTC)AndyB66Reply
If he actually had a tiny head, it's worth mentioning. If it's just shitty art, it ain't. — LlywelynII 04:32, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Selinus in Cilicia or Sicilia, please check

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According to Mary Boatwright (in A. Barrett, ed., Lives of the Caesars, Blackwell, Oxford, 2008, p. 161), Trajan died in Gazipaşa (Selinus, Selinti, in Turkey, ancient Cilicia), not in the well-known Sicilian Selinus. Please check. --Lionni (talk) 15:34, 20 October 2008 (UTC)Reply

Selinus, the site of Trajan's death, was in Cilicia on the south-eastern coast of present day Turkey. See Julian Bennett, Trajan, Optimus Princeps (Bloominton, 1997) pg. 202. The city built a temple dedicated to Trajan and it appeared on their coinage under the emperor Septimius Severus, see Henry C. Lindgren, Lindgren III, Ancient Greek Bronze Coins: The Lindgren Collection (Berkeley, 1994) pg 99, coin A906a.

On another matter, note 7 of the Trajan article has two errors. "Mexicans" are mentioned as traveling with the commander Fuscus. "Lanas" are mentioned and I can find no reference to who they were. Rareanniversary (talk) 21:55, 26 April 2009 (UTC)Reply

Ashes

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Is there some truth to the legend that Trajan's ashes were removed or stolen from Trajan's Column by some Spanish ambassador and taken to the Casa de Pilatos palace in Seville near his natal Italica? --Error (talk) 02:26, 23 March 2009 (UTC)Reply

Trajan

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Just wondering how this name is pronounced. If he was from Spain, which speaks spanish, wouldn't the "J" in the middle of the name make the "H" sound? So it would sound like the last name Trahan? Just a thought. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 76.31.189.236 (talk) 22:36, 2 September 2009 (UTC)Reply

You're joking, right? The Spanish language did not exist in the 2nd century AD, along with French, German, English, Italian, etc. The Romans spoke Latin, if this was not painfully obvious to you before. "Trajan" is simply an Anglicization of his name; in Latin it is TRAIANVS (pronounced: Tray-ee-ah-noose), with no J, since this letter did not exist in the Latin Alphabet of the Roman period. Hope that clears this up.--Pericles of AthensTalk 18:14, 10 September 2010 (UTC)Reply
You're joking, right? If you're going to be that pedantic about classical Latin pronunciation, you should at least be aware of its vowel values and the possible consonantal value for I. It would've been /traːˈi̯aː.nus/ trah-ee-AH-noos or /traːˈjaː.nus/ trah-YAH-noos. In any case, OP asked how the name is pronounced. It's /ˈtɹeɪ.d͡ʒən/ TRAY-juhn or /ˈtɹeɪ.d͡ʒæn/ TRAY-jan in English and in Spanish it would be something like /traˈhano/ trah-HAH-no with the j read as an h. — LlywelynII 04:45, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Trajan's origins

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With Trajan becoming the first non-Italic Emperor,due you think that this marks a turning in the Roman mindset of what it means to be Roman? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Nichhowsy (talkcontribs) 22:13, 22 September 2010 (UTC)Reply

Trajan's origins (edit)

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Trajan's origins

With Trajan becoming the first non-Italic Emperor,due you think that this marks a turning in the Roman mindset of what it means to be Roman?Nichhowsy (talk) 22:16, 22 September 2010 (UTC) NichhowsyReply

While the TP is not a forum, the short answer is "no" - he came from a solid Roman colonial family. It didn't matter that he was not born in Italy. HammerFilmFan (talk) 00:45, 28 January 2015 (UTC)Reply

I would say that it has a lot to do with Hispania's eventual massive rise in influence within the empire(important writers and many senatorial families had centuries-old ties to Hispania). Additionally, when it comes to his ancestry only his mother is known to be fully Italian, ethnically speaking. His father is known to be born and raised in Hispania. His paternal grandfather had some distant Italian ancestry but how many of his paternal ancestors are actually Italian is not known. For example, the homeland of his paternal grandmother is a big question mark. With these pieces of his ancestry puzzle missing it can only be stated that he's of partial Italian origins. However, the fact that he was born and raised in Italica makes Trajan ethnically Hispanic in the same sense that the Latin writer Martial is. Until it is proven that his ancestry is completely Italian, he cannot be considered of Italian stock.Aesthetics101 (talk) 02:55, 26 May 2015 (UTC)Reply

Incorrect. Read the two sources listed in the article. His background is thoroughly Italian. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 50.111.12.90 (talk) 06:16, 26 November 2020 (UTC)Reply
Incorrect is your opinion. "His background is thoroughly Italian". LOL. Cite a single phrase in the article saying that absurdity. His family was known to have mixed with the native population, and of course it did happen after so much time. Just read the article again, his family was even known to have lost citizenship because of such marriages, the article is just here, read it. I think the major point in this narrative to try to distance him from Spanish roots is that Northern American and European historiography is almost entirely anti-Spanish in its historical bias, the "Black Legend" against the Spaniards and their fantastic history is present even in articles like this one; which is funny, considering that Anglo-Saxons have nothing to do with the Roman Empire and have to try to distort its history to avoid acknowledging simple facts like this, "Trajan was too great for me to accept that he was a Spaniard with native blood", LOL. He had Iberian blood, he was born in Hispania and more, he was one of the first known Spaniards: He had Spanish blood and Latin culture. Also, i don't need to mention how maternal DNA is so dominating in such circumstances following the generations, search for Ottoman dinastic history (which also had a patriarchal culture and was known to mix with native woman and neighboring peoples) and you will have a glympse on it.177.38.210.52 (talk) 01:44, 29 November 2023 (UTC)Reply

Wrong Selinus in the article.

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Trajan did not die in Selinus/Selinunte, Sicily. He died in Selinus, current Gazipasa, some 40km south-east of Alanya, Turkey. That settlement was later renamed Trajanopolis. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Andershl (talkcontribs) 21:42, 29 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

Romanization of Dacia = Formation of the Romanian people - no word about it?

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There are 5 nations and languages with strong and direct roots from the Roman Empire: Italians, Spanish, French, Portuguese and Romanians. The conquest of Dacia by Trajan, marks the birth of the Romanians as a people. The article makes no mention about the Romanization of Dacia which lead to the formation of the Romanian people on that territory. Is this omission intentional and if yes, why? Thewallachian (talk) 17:49, 5 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

Because that's completely wrong. The Romanian people have their roots in the Vlachs and the nation formed in the Middle Ages. HammerFilmFan (talk) 00:44, 28 January 2015 (UTC)Reply

Trajan (Traian) as Hadrain!

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I would just like to think the person responsible for indicating the possibility that the visage of Trajan might well have been continued by an imposter! Certainly, the common belief that Hadrian was a native of "Adraini"?, or some other nearby place is wrong? Was the "Adraitic" Sea, named for either? And going deep into the well, could one well consider that "Adrian" was the correct form for both or one?69.92.23.64 (talk) 20:33, 20 January 2011 (UTC)Ronald L. HughesReply

Legacy section is unbalanced ...

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When I get some time I can cite many references that punch wholes in Trajan's reputation. While an excellent administrator, he wasted valuable resources in Mesopotamia that could have been used to much better effect elsewhere, for example. He did not handle the Jewish trouble well at all, nor did he set up for a successor that could, either - whatever Hadrian's other qualities might have been. HammerFilmFan (talk) 00:05, 14 October 2011 (UTC)Reply

I would like to see those references that assess Trajan negatively. Yes we all know his eastern conquests were a failure. Yet, he was the first emperor to bring Persia to it's knees, plus he conquered Dacia. The Jews rebelled regularly during that period of Roman history and the issues at hand could hardly be blamed on Trajan. The concept of "resources could have been spent elsewhere" is also hollow. Expansion into Mesopotamia was the last truly profitable region into which the empire could expand. Trajan simply bit off more than he could chew. If anything the idleness of the empire between 117 and the early 160s hurt more in the long run. In retrospect we know it would have served the empire better if Trajan sought to achieve limited, realistic objectives in his eastern war, such as sacking Ctesiphon then settling on the Tigris how Severus and Diocletian did.--Tataryn77 (talk) 06:29, 15 October 2011 (UTC)Reply
You are clearly not a professional historian from those remarks. Also, OR is not permitted here. HammerFilmFan (talk) 02:12, 28 January 2012 (UTC)Reply
You clearly did not refute anything I said. However, I do think It would be great to see a more varied view here on the repercussions of Trajan's policies.--Tataryn77 (talk) 03:20, 7 December 2012 (UTC)Reply
And since that time the article has been updated accordingly, your arguments were weak and misleading. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 50.111.12.90 (talk) 06:18, 26 November 2020 (UTC)Reply

Ancient sources on Trajan

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It is claimed in the article that "ancient sources on Trajan's personality and accomplishments are unanimously positive".

I know at least one which is not - Julian the Apostate's The Caesars: [1] [2] Daizus (talk) 09:56, 12 December 2011 (UTC)Reply

Clarification about GENS

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Traianus was a member of gens Ulpia. He was born in Spain into a Roman family of Italian stock. His mother is unknown; however, his paternal ancestors moved from Italy and settled in Italica (near modern Seville, Spain) in the Roman Province of Hispania Baetica.


That's false. Marcus Ulpius Traianus' gens was TRAII and not ULPIA. Marcus Ulpius Traianus was adopted for a roman family but he was of turdetanii ancestors (iberian tribe of Southwest of Spain) His parents weren't from Italy then. And Trajan adopted his surname

About Marcus Ulpius Traianus' gens you can read: http://uam.academia.edu/AliciaMCanto/Books/1136197/Las_raices_beticas_de_Trajano_los_Traii_de_la_Italica_turdetana_y_otras_novedades_sobre_su_familia_texto_ — Preceding unsigned comment added by 83.59.237.90 (talk) 20:05, 18 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

This is the ENGLISH Wikipedia. HammerFilmFan (talk) 00:17, 28 August 2012 (UTC)Reply

I think that the book of Alicia Canto is not enough to change the incipit, as it has been done, a making Trajan "Born into an ethnically Hispanic family of partial Italian origin". That may of course be true, but as long as we know, his mother was from gens Marcia, his father from gens Ulpia. So I'll reverted back to the previous version. Carlo

Whatever the case, he had some Spanish blood and no single sources denies it, or could deny it. Even the article is clear about the fact that his family once even lost the citizenship because of marriage with local women, and after that long time of settlement you know that you have a very interesting and unusual pattern by some Northern Europeans here, almost like they want passionately to steal this part of Spain's history because Trajan was the greatest Emperor. To reinforce this point even more (i fell like trying to convince people that the sky is blue); the pattern of dominance by maternal DNA when generations follow with the same kind of (obvious) marriage, the many evidences, his birth, his provincial family's history all of that reinforce this fact even more... you won't believe in evidences like that only if you really don't want to believe in them... due to personal POV and passion. At least some Hispanic blood he was sure to have, and his culture was Latin, he was probably the greatest early Spaniard, and his extended family continued there. For some reason, some people that are anti-Spanish for most of the times want to deny it desperately (i'm not Spanish, neither Spanish-speaking, i just like the truth more than these blatant biases). Many Spanish families started like his own family, he was an early Spaniard born in Hispania and whose successor also was born there, also there was a time in Rome that Hispanic families were dominating political power, provicial power started to grow from that province. 177.38.210.52 (talk) 02:17, 29 November 2023 (UTC)Reply

Era style

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Out of respect for the Nerva-Antonine Dynasty, it would be preferred that "BCE" and "CE" be used instead of "BC" and "AD" since these people had no affiliation, or liking to Christianity. If you object, please provide a valid reason as to why. Lupus Bellator (talk) 20:54, 4 December 2012 (UTC)Reply

There's no call to switch from one convention to the other, per WP:ERA.Cúchullain t/c 20:25, 4 December 2012 (UTC)Reply
I may sound like a broken record but I agree again with Cúchullain as in talk Nerva. Δρ.Κ. λόγοςπράξις 20:54, 4 December 2012 (UTC)Reply
Ditto. Lupus needs to stop his era crusading. Cynwolfe (talk) 21:49, 4 December 2012 (UTC)Reply
Opposed, if this comes back up. — LlywelynII 04:46, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Homosexual

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Was Trajan homosexual or bisexual? And if so, why is this not mentioned? 86.166.132.195 (talk) 09:38, 7 July 2013 (UTC)Reply

You might be interested in Homosexuality in ancient Rome, in order to see why those modern labels might not be useful in understanding Roman male sexuality. Cynwolfe (talk) 22:43, 29 July 2013 (UTC)Reply
More helpfully, as mentioned above, Cassius Dio states he was a "good" pederast, a politely Latinate term for a gay pedophile. As Cynwolfe was trying to point out, Roman ideas about sexuality didn't map out onto 21st century English ones so the possibility is open that he was bisexual or just being slandered for political purposes. As for why it wasn't mentioned in the article yet, presumably an editor got their knickers in a twist about its inclusion. — LlywelynII 04:47, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

His official name

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His name is given (twice) as Imperator Caesar Nerva Traianus Divi Nerva fili Augustus. This should be Imperator Caesar Nerva Traianus Divi Nervae filius Augustus (2 words changed). Collideascope (talk) 22:19, 29 July 2013 (UTC)Reply

Right. Filius describes Trajan himself and so agrees (nominative) with his name; he's the son of (genitive) the Divine Nerva. Will fix. Cynwolfe (talk) 22:47, 29 July 2013 (UTC)Reply

On the role of the Legio II Traiana Fortis in Trajan's Second Dacian War

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The article states that, according to Dando-Collins, the Legio II Traiana Fortis was deployed in Laodicea (Syria) shortly after being recruited along with XXX Ulpia Victrix. Nevertheless, other scholars (Ronald Syme, Ritterling, Strobel, Urloiu...) think that it was actually garrisoned in the lower Danube, most probably in Moesia Superior, before being sent to the East.

Moreover, some of them (again Syme) think that both legions may have fought in Trajan's Dacian Wars.

Ritterling, E., 1925. RE XII. Col. 1485. Syme, R., 1971. Danubian Papers, Bucharest. Page 106. Strobel, K., 1984. Untersuchungen zu den Dakerkriegen Trajans. Studien zur Geschichte des mittleren und unteren Donauraumes in der Hohen Kaiserzeit, Antiquitas I 33. Bonn. Page 98. Strobel, K., 2010. Kaiser Traian. Eine Epoche der Weltgeschichte, Verlag Friedrich Pustet. Regensburg. Page 254-255, 265, 299, 364. Urloiu, R-L., AGAIN ON LEGIO II TRAIANA FORTIS,. History and Civilization. EUBSR 2013 International Conference, Volume 2.

Aquiles77 (talk) 19:18, 31 December 2014 (UTC)Reply

GA Review

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GA toolbox
Reviewing
This review is transcluded from Talk:Trajan/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Tim riley (talk · contribs) 14:14, 3 March 2015 (UTC)Reply


Starting first read-through. More soonest. Tim riley talk 14:14, 3 March 2015 (UTC)Reply

Initial comments after first read through for spelling, punctuation etc:

  • The article uses mostly American spellings, but a few English spellings have crept in and should be Americanised for consistency: "unfavourable", "formalisation", "honour", "imperilled" and "Christianisation", unless any of these spellings is authorised in a reputable American dictionary.
  • Parenthetic dashes: the article is a mish-mash of hyphens, en-dashes, unspaced em-dashes and spaced em-dashes. You must comply with the Manual of Style and standardise on either spaced en-dashes or unspaced em-dashes throughout. I know some editors find it difficult to spot these differences, and I hope you will feel free to say if you have difficulty with this: I can help if necessary.
  • All the colloquial "wasn't"s, "didn't"s and "it's"s must be changed into "was not", "did not", "it is" etc. See MOS:N'T.

Those will need to be put right before the article meets the GA standard for prose. More detailed comments, following close reading, will follow a.s.a.p. – Tim riley talk 14:57, 3 March 2015 (UTC)Reply

Before I start work on a close reading, may I just check that the nominator is intending to deal with the above points in the next few days? If not, there isn't much point to my proceeding further. Tim riley talk 12:47, 6 March 2015 (UTC)Reply

Dear Tim Riley, I'm more than willing to press further the GAN for this article. What am I supposed to do?Cerme (talk) 21:00, 14 March 2015 (UTC)Reply

I think the points above are clear. If you attend to them we can move on. Tim riley talk 10:39, 15 March 2015 (UTC)Reply

Thanks a loyt!. I fear I will need help wish the dashes, though - I'm not familiar with the conventions used. Cerme (talk) 18:01, 15 March 2015 (UTC)Reply

I have been remiss in failing to spot that the nominator has had no part in the writing of this article, and is on present evidence not able to make the necessary changes to bring it up to GA standard. I am failing the nomination, but I will be happy to help with any upgrade preparatory to a second nomination. Tim riley talk 21:33, 15 March 2015 (UTC)Reply

A few questions following GOCE copy-edit

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In response to a request at Wikipedia:WikiProject Guild of Copy Editors/Requests, I have just completed a copy-edit of Trajan. I have a few minor concerns:

1) The last two sentences of the second paragraph in the section Trajan#Early life and rise to power are:

  • During his tenure in Pannonia, he fought against the Suebic tribes in Germania. Under Nerva's rule, Trajan was one of the most gifted generals.

These sentences immediately follow several sentences about his origins and family. The change to a "tenure in Pannonia", with no date and no transitional words, seems rather abrupt. Also, the next sentence mentions his being a "gifted general". Then the sentences that follow go back to Trajan as a young man, and his early military career. I think these sentences are out of chronological order and would be better placed later in the section. Does anyone have any suggestions about where to place them?

2) The last sentence of the first paragraph in the section Trajan#The ''Correctores'': Greek/Roman relations is the following:

  • This had to do mostly with curbing the overenthusiastic spending on public works that was used as a means of channeling ancient rivalries between neighboring cities, and therefore with the fact that junior members of the local oligarchies would feel disinclined to present themselves to fill posts as local magistrates, such positions involving ever increasing personal expenses.

Besides the fact that the sentence is a bit long, I think the part "that was used as a means of channeling ancient rivalries between neighboring cities" needs to be made clearer, if it is to remain in the sentence. For the average reader, it will not be clear how "overenthusiastic spending on public works" could have been used "as a means of channeling ancient rivalries", nor what the connection to the junior members of the local oligarchies feeling "disinclined to...fill posts" is. It's all too densely academic.

3) In the middle of the fourth paragraph in that section is the following sentence:

  • One of the compensatory measures proposed by Pliny expressed a thoroughly Roman conservative position: that it was necessary to lower the minimum age to hold a seat in the local city council in order to increase the number of younger members of the local oligarchies who would contribute to civic spending, something that was seen as better than enrolling upstarts from the plebs into the councils.

The structure of the sentence is clear enough, and the sentence is fairly clear up to "civic spending," but the last part is not clear enough. What are "upstarts from the plebs"? I suppose "plebs" is short for "plebians", but even that ought to be explained or linked. Also, it's not really clear why increasing the number of younger members of the local oligarchies would be better than "enrolling upstarts from the plebs". Why mention this if the reason is not given? This is comprehensible only to someone already familiar with Roman history.

4) I wonder whether the sections Trajan#The ''Correctores'': Greek/Roman relations, Trajan#Conquest of Dacia, and especially Trajan#War against Parthia are not too long.

Well, that's all. – Corinne (talk) 02:52, 25 October 2015 (UTC) P.S. I don't know how to get "Correctores" in italics in a section heading link. Corinne (talk) 02:53, 25 October 2015 (UTC)Reply

Dear Corinne: Thank you very much for the copy-edit. The sentences discussed in points (2) through (4) were written by me, and I would like to discuss them with you later. RegardsCerme (talk) 17:16, 26 October 2015 (UTC)Reply

Origins

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I reverted the last edits about the origin of Trajan. The author of this edit, in order to pursue his point of view, has removed the recent work of a reputable provincial archaeologist and university professor, and has given as references a primary source, an online encyclopedia on volunteer basis (practically, another wikipedia) and a 50 years old book of a travel author. Cherrypicking on the web is not the best way to write a good quality article: I am sure that there are better sources which support the Spanish origin of Trajan, but until these are not found, I would suggest to leave in place those which are now in the article, and maybe discuss them on this thread. Alex2006 (talk) 17:17, 10 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

I was just about to do the same; this determination with proving Trajan an "ethnic Spaniard", whatever that might mean in a 1st-century context, is IMO misguided. Trajan may not have been a pure-blood Italic, but that is beside the point. His paternal descent was certifiably Italian, and the milieu he grew up in was certainly fully Italic, even if a bit rustic. Constantine 17:28, 10 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

I thought it was important to point out that Trajan was the product of a birth and upbringing in southern Hispania just like his father and grandfather and so on. Trajan's paternal Italian ancestry is from several centuries before his time and it's very non-specific in the sense that if you go back in his genealogy as soon as you get to his paternal grandmother, her origin is unknown, that would make his father only half Italian for certain.

I think it's misleading not to assume that he's "of fully Italic stock" when that simply can't be known. He's definitely of partial known paternal Italian ancestry but half of it is unknown and I think a distinction should be made between being of partial Italian origins and being of full Italian origins.

His place of birth is instrumental to his reign because according to Professor Leonard A. Curchin: "Trajan and Hadrian inturn recruited new senators, sothat Spaniards made up about 25 per cent of the Senate.". A trend that began with Vespasian but continued and increased with Trajan and Hadrian. 25 percent is massive considering that Hispania is a single Roman province.

I'm not trying to start anything like a internet forum "flame war" or anything of the sort. Just explaining my perspective. I'll definitely work to get better sources, as well. Just give me time, I'm new to this. Aesthetics101 (talk) 20:16, 10 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

We are not assuming bad faith on your part, but trying to point out that Trajan was of only partly Italic ancestry is one thing; calling him an "ethnic Spaniard" is quite another. "Ethnically" labelling any figure is liable to open a can of worms, and one should be very careful when adding such labels. "Spaniard" in this context merely means someone from Spain; there was certainly no "Spaniard" ethnicity at the time, but rather a number of Iberian tribes of various origins (Celts etc.), along with the Italic settlers, who, at least until Trajan's time, formed the bulk of the Latin and Roman citizenry in the province. Mass award of citizenship to genuinely native provincials only began at about the time Trajan was born, and his family was clearly far older than that. And whatever the admixture of Iberian blood in Trajan's bloodline, the environment he grew up with did not differ much from any rural Italian town of his time. Him promoting fellow "Spaniards" to office was no different than any politician staffing his department with people from his province on the assumption that they would show loyalty. It had much to do with the all-pervasive Roman clientage networks and the emperors' promotion of the image of Hispania as a fully "Roman" province (Trajan, being born outside Italy, would have been considered a rustic by the ancient families of the state), and very little with "ethnicity". Constantine 20:44, 10 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Well, yes, I agree with that point. Ancestry and ethnicity are different. Trajan was certainly not fully Italian in ancestry, too many suspicious "unknowns" in his genealogy. But the term "Spaniard" when referring to people from Hispania(not modern Spain) is widespread among historians, like professor Leonard(he even explains his use of the term "Spaniard" in the beginning of the book), for example. It's nothing new nor is it generally frowned upon. In fact, it seems to be used more than "Hispanic". Do you know of a better name to use for the Latin speaking people of Hispania? Hispano-Roman? There seems to be no consensus on this that I'm aware of so I'd like there to be something more concrete.

My main question when it comes to ethnicity is: what makes Trajan ethnically more "Italian" than say, the Latin author Martial? Trajan clearly favored people from Hispania, at least when it came to his recruitment of Senators, which on its own isn't important but if you look at how Senators from Hispania peaked during Trajan and Hadrian's reign, it is worth noting, in my view. If they wanted to promote and reassure that Hispania was fully "Roman", then ethnicity must have played a role there too(they did not want to be seen as foreigners). Aesthetics101 (talk) 03:40, 11 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

In addition to all these points, I would like to remind you of the original sentence:
  • Although frequently designated the first provincial emperor, Trajan, though born outside of Italy, was actually of Italic stock.
I'll leave it to you to work out the details, but the main point of this sentence is that although Trajan has frequently been designated the first provincial governor, he was not as fully provincial as other emperors (don't know which). If this is correct, and you agree the point is worth making, this syntax ought to be used in order to make the point. Corinne (talk) 04:42, 11 November 2015 (UTC)Reply
"ethnicity must have played a role there too(they did not want to be seen as foreigners)" is not quit true. You mix the modern notion of ethnicity in a time and place ill-suited for it. Remember that Rome was in the beginning a city-state, and that a "provincial" was initially any politician who was not born in Rome, e.g. Marius or even Cicero. This carried a certain social stigma when opposed to the patrician families that had ruled the Republic. In the late Republic, for numerous reasons the Senate came to comprise more and more men born outside Rome, so this stigma was transferred to the provinces proper. Ethnic origin did not as yet enter into it (much) as most of these new senators were still of Italian stock. As far as we can tell, Trajan was of Italic stock. He may plausibly have had some local ancestry, but what it was and to what extent is unknown. Politically and culturally, which is more important either way, he belonged to a family and a community that was solidly Italian/Roman. Constantine 17:42, 11 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Corinne, I believe Claudius was the first foreign born Roman Emperor but I know little else about him. Other than that, he's sort of popular for not being a homosexual but I 'm not really sure about any of that other than his birthplace. Claudius seems to be very Italian but his wikipedia page doesn't say anything about him being of Italic stock. I think emperors like Trajan are given a more "pure" Roman identity because of their importance. You're right about the syntax, it's worded in a confusing manner and its point isn't clear. Trajan is not of pure Italian ancestry, you can look at his paternal ancestry to find that out rather easily. It's misleading to say that his "stock" or, rather, ancestry, is Italian, when it is documented as only partly so(his genealogy). His paternal grandmother is unknown, so his lineage isn't entirely Italian for certain. If ancestry is what that is referring to, it needs to be reworded to reflect that he is of partial known Italian ancestry.

NOTE-that Claudius was born while his father (Drusus)was on campaign for Augustus on the German frontier, and that his mother gave birth to him there due to rushing to his side after an injury there, says nothing about his rock-solid Italian ancestry. His mother Antonia was related to Julius and Octavian (Augustus) Caesar, his grandfather was Mark Anthony, and by his father's side to the Claudian gens. 50.111.12.90 (talkcontribs) 01:33, 26 November 2020‎ (UTC)Reply

Constantine, By Italian stock, are you referring to culture/ethnicity or ancestry? Can it really be known that all the senators from Hispania are pure Italians if their families have roots in Hispania that span centuries? If by Italian stock you mean ancestry, then he certainly isn't of Italian stock but more accurately, of partial Italian stock. Since his genealogy has so many unknowns, it can't be assumed that these unknown ancestors were from Italy. We have to go by what we know and we only know part of his ancestry from centuries past. I completely agree that culture is far more important than genetics or what have you. In that case, in your view was Trajan culturally more "Italian/Roman" than other Hispania-born Romans like Seneca the Younger, Seneca the Elder or Martial?

What's the ethnic difference between a "pure" Hispania-born person that is fully Romanized, culturally and another Romanized Hispania-born person that has Italian from several centuries back? If the criteria is cultural, then Martial should also be considered to be of Italic stock. Aesthetics101 (talk) 05:34, 12 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

I am afraid that you are Flogging a dead horse here. What Constantine writes is perfectly clear, and this coincides with today's academic consensus about the Origin of Trajan. I encourage you again to read more academic sources and to discuss them here. All the rest (comparison with other people born in Hispania, meaning of ethnicity, etc.) is (at the best) only original research. Bye, Alex2006 (talk) 07:06, 12 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

I just wanted to know what his thoughts were on what makes certain people of Hispania more Italian than others, as I find it very interesting. However, it's fine if you want to give me the Cold shoulder on that.

Let's move on to sources then. Is there a source for this academic consensus you mentioned? Because there are respected historians like Boston University professor Fred S Kleiner wrote that Trajan was "the first non-Italian to rule Rome"(probably referring to his birth and upbringing). He published the book in 2009 and is highly respected with a noteworthy academic background. I don't see why he would want to mislead anyone.

ps. I just noticed someone edited the "Early life and rise to power" section. It has been improved significantly.Aesthetics101 (talk) 00:45, 13 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

He was not "someone" who improved the article, but Constantine, who precised in the article what he had explained here. I don't understand the "partial" which you introduced, can you explain it? About the source that you brought, by "non Italian" he means, as you say, his origin from Hispania, which none denies. The primary sources whence the academia derives its consensus is here:

Ulpius Trajanus ex urbe Tudertina, Ulpius ab avo dictus, Trajanus a Trajo ... Quid fuit origine Hispanus , nativitate velo Tudertinus fuerit Optimus Principum

I think that this is quite clear. You can put the accent on his birthplace, or on his patrilinear origin, or both, but what we know from it is what Constantine explained above. Alex2006 (talk) 05:51, 13 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Ah, okay, then Constantine clarified that nicely in the appropriate section, then. I could do without the oddly condescending responses, though.

I will explain why I introduced "partial" : He was specifically referring to Trajan's paternal ancestors as hailing from Italy in that sentence. Well, if you look at Trajan's paternal grandmother she is unknown. That means Trajan's known paternal ancestors are only partially Italian for certain. It can't be assumed that an unknown paternal ancestor is of full Italian origin if one of his parents is unknown.

Since Trajan's father, Marcus Ulpius Traianus (senior) is only known to be half Italian, Emperor Trajan's paternal Italian ancestry is partial. Do you see my point? It's a very narrow point but I think the distinction is important, nonetheless. Aesthetics101 (talk) 00:50, 14 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Your distinction does not seem important to any other editor so far, nor to any reliable modern source nor to any ancient source. Not only the substantive point, but your concern for it, are based on original research. I'm sorry if you find that condescending, but it's high time to drop the issue. Editing Wikipedia should be fun, and I'm sure you could make other and much more valuable contributions elsewhere. Richard Keatinge (talk) 14:49, 14 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Actually, a respected historian that specializes in Hispania Baetica and ancient Rome by the name of Alicia M. Canto also makes this distinction.

In her book, Las raíces béticas de Trajano. Los "Traii" de la Itálica Turdetana y otras novedades sobre su familia, she writes: "About his supposed Italian descent, and his unknown grandparents ... we don't know the slightest of details about Trajan's grandparents, paternal nor maternal".

She even takes it a step further, stating that "it is often claimed that the Ulpia family hails from Italy, and settled Scipio's Italica during the republic. But the fact is that in Italy itself, there is no evidence of an Ulpius in the entirety of the long-lasting republican period".

I don't think you have the authority to make anyone here drop any issue. And I find the origins of famous historical figures to be the most fun of topics by far. As this source comes from a respected and reliable historian, I will add the fact that Trajan's grandparents are completely unknown to the article if I find the time to do so. Aesthetics101 (talk) 04:02, 15 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

I do suggest that you obtain consensus here before making any changes to the article. Richard Keatinge (talk) 18:48, 15 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Though he is believed to have Italian ancestry on his father's side, details about Trajan's paternal and maternal grandparents are nonexistent.

Anyone disagree with that statement? My reliable modern source is posted in my earlier response. Aesthetics101 (talk) 07:20, 16 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

I merely doubt that anyone else thinks it's worth mentioning in this article. Richard Keatinge (talk) 08:06, 16 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Well, I do. The reliable modern source I posted here presents relevant information. I think the factual information from said source holds more weight than the opinions of Wikipedia editors here. The article clearly talks about Trajan's origins in great detail so I don't see anything controversial about this. Aesthetics101 (talk) 10:31, 16 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

OK, having struggled through your source (my Spanish isn't good) it seems to present a desperately strained argument at great length. As far as I know, in the twelve years since its publication, nobody else has really taken it up or even bothered to disagree with it. Feel free to try to persuade editors to support using it here. Richard Keatinge (talk) 11:04, 17 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Of course nobody has disagreed with it, she's just stating the obvious: that aside from frequently claimed, extremely non-specific Italian ancestry, we know diddly-squat about Trajan's ancestors. If you consider stringing together a series of well known, uncontroversial facts desperate, then sure. She's simply pointing out what we do know. A very interesting read, in my opinion.

It's apparent that the distinction Dr. Canto makes isn't one you want to hear but I don't think you are qualified to disagree with this archaeologist on a professional level nor is anyone else here that I'm aware of. Additionally, this source is more recent than both of the sources used in the relevant section and goes into detail about aspects of his origins that the other sources do not touch upon. I don't think I have to defend the credentials of this source but feel free to look her up. Otherwise I see no reason not to use this high quality source which is dedicated entirely to Trajan's origins. Aesthetics101 (talk) 09:04, 18 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Feel free to gain an editorial consensus here. Richard Keatinge (talk) 10:02, 18 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

That's what I was doing here. But no one has proven my point or source to be untrue. Not liking the distinction doesn't make it untrue.

Everyone seems to have deflected the distinction I brought up but no one has proven it untrue. And you just said that you don't like what the source says but that doesn't mean anything.

I'm just leaving my source here for others to go through. And unless someone can prove that Dr. Canto is not a reliable source, I will eventually use it provided I have time. Aesthetics101 (talk) 12:42, 18 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Dear Aesthetics, I read the paper of Canto. Her hypothesis is mainly based on an (alleged) wrong reading of the sources: the word "Tudertinus" should be read as "Turdetanus". The reason for that, according to Canto, is that the correct word for inhabitant of Tuder is "Tuders" (actually, she wrote "Tudertis", mixing genitive with nominative, but this is a minor point). Reading something instead of something else is a very strong claim, and this means that you (not the others), should provide a robust proof that the academy is now accepting this hypothesis as valid. In this case, we can bring it into the article. Otherwise, this is just a case of another fringe theory (btw, doing some OR, my Latin dictionary reports "Tudertinus" as a valid form (younger than "Tuders") for inhabitant of Tuder). Alex2006 (talk) 14:08, 18 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

My aim isn't to introduce the hypothesis itself but the uncontroversial facts she presents about his grandparents: "About his supposed Italian descent, and his unknown grandparents ... we don't know the slightest of details about Trajan's grandparents, paternal nor maternal". That's not at all fringe and only takes a second to look at his known genealogy, which is to say there isn't much. As Canto's credentials outweigh yours I don't think you're in a position to invalidate the very specific and uncontroversial distinction she made about his grandparents. Aesthetics101 (talk) 08:11, 19 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

None of us is a specialist in this field, so we cannot outweigh anyone here. In order to write our articles we only use reliable sources belonging to the mainstream, and avoid those which appear to be fringe. Back to Canto, if what she writes is uncontroversial, you don't need to use her as source. If not, you cannot use it, unless you show that her theory has been accepted among the scholars, as @Richard Keatinge: pointed above. Alex2006 (talk) 08:46, 19 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Wikipedia only asks for modern reliable sources. Fringe is a relative term. In general, Dr. Canto is well within the mainstream. I would hardly consider an archaeologist from a respected University like Canto to be on the fringe.

As I said before I'm not aiming to add the hypothesis itself but the uncontraversial facts (or lack thereof) about Trajan's grandparents. That is all. Aesthetics101 (talk) 11:03, 19 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

From WP:FRINGE:

Wikipedia summarizes significant opinions, with representation in proportion to their prominence. A Wikipedia article should not make a fringe theory appear more notable or more widely accepted than it is. Claims must be based upon independent reliable sources. If discussed in an article about a mainstream idea, a theory that is not broadly supported by scholarship in its field must not be given undue weight, and reliable sources must be cited that affirm the relationship of the marginal idea to the mainstream idea in a serious and substantial manner.

I hope that it is clear for you. Alex2006 (talk) 11:13, 19 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Ok, so I can say that his grandparents are completely unknown(my main issue here) and do to that fact, a known scholar has pushed forward the possibility that Trajan could be of indigenous Iberian ancestry.

As long as it is not given undue weight. Got it. Thank you. Aesthetics101 (talk) 12:12, 19 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

No, you got it wrong (as usual :-)). Unless you can find that the theory of Canto found acceptance among the academy, citing this in the article is WP:UNDUE and WP:OR (since the main point of Canto is the denial of the current interpretation of the main source about Trajan's origin). Alex2006 (talk) 12:18, 19 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

I'll take your word for it even though it's used as a source on the Spanish version of Trajan's article.

And the uncontraversial fact about his unknown grandparents?(my main issue and a distinction that is made on his father's article already)Aesthetics101 (talk) 12:33, 19 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

The fact that it is used on eswiki does not surprise me. First, the paper is in Spanish, second, unfortunately Wikipedia is full with nationalistic POV-pushers which try to declare notables as belonging to their nation/group/tribe (right now there is an Albanian trying to proof that Napoleon was partly of Albanian origin). About his grandparents, the fact that they are unknown is no positive proof that he was of provincial stock. Anyway, during the next days I will go to the Central library and look for the newest works about him (there is a fairly new very good biography of Karl Strobel about him) to see what the newest stand of the research is. Alex2006 (talk) 12:54, 19 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

The fact that they're unknown is just that. I just wanted that fact in the article since he and his father are famous Roman historical figures (his father is mentioned in the article as well).

Since his father was a prominent senator it's worth noting that his father's father is an unknown. Aesthetics101 (talk) 13:19, 19 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Forgive me for intruding, but the issue here seems to be: what's the point? Trajan's possible "Spanish" stock is as relevant to his role in Roman history as St. Augustine's Northern African descent was to his theology. If Trajan was from a Greek or Jewish family, now that would be something, as far as Greeks and Jews were somehow alienated from the Roman Imperial order. But then Trajan, as a scion of a Western grandee family, most probably regarded himself as a fully Roman citzen, inscribed in a Roman voting tribe and a member of the Roman Senate.Cerme (talk) 13:49, 20 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

Aesthetics101 I am not a scholar in this area, so I cannot take a side in this discussion, but I wonder about your wish to add that the identity of Trajan's grandparents is unknown. I thought, generally, an encyclopedia strives to impart what is known about the world and the universe, and does not dwell on what is unknown. If an encyclopedia attempted to state what is unknown about every topic, I think the size of the encyclopedia would become unwieldy. I also think in your wish to revise the original sentence, you miss the point of that sentence: that although Trajan is often called the first provincial emperor, given what is known about his Italic family background and the milieu in which he was raised, he was not really as provincial as some other emperors. However, it could be argued that that sentence is not a particularly important sentence. I'll leave that to others to decide. Corinne (talk) 01:32, 21 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

No problem at all, Cerme, this is a "talk" page, after all. While I do think that upbringing is more important, I think the unknown nature of his grandparents is worth a mention. It helps give his origins some context in the same sense that Constantine added the unsubstantiated possibility that his ancestors could have married local women. He felt that unknown possibility was worth a mention as well(something no one took issue with). By the way, until it was introduced to the article, I had no idea that Cassius Dio dismissed Trajan as an "Iberian". It just sounded strange for a Roman historian to dismiss an emperor as a foreigner.

As for your thoughts on him considering himself a fully Roman citizen: Wasn't that the case for every Latin-speaking Iberian with full Roman citizenship? I'm sure the Iberian ancestors of Marcus Aurelius considered themselves fully Roman citizens as well. And Trajan's Spanish birth, upbringing, and education are not things I'd consider insignificant, either.

Corinne, I think it deserves a brief mention in the context of his father's prominence, in order to give his origins more background. Also, thanks for helping to clarify the main point of that sentence, it makes a lot more sense when you put it that way. It really can be argued that that sentence is not particularly important but its inclusion seems to be a matter of personal preference. For example, I just took a look at the Ancient History Encyclopedia and while Trajan's article mentions his Italian ancestry, Hadrian's article makes no such mention and simply goes on to say that both Trajan and Hadrian were "ethnically Hispanic". One writer chose to accent his paternal ancestry while the other placed the accent on their upbringing. That might not mean much to some contributors here but what they write is more important to me since every single contribution is reviewed by a panel of experts before being published. At the very least, it can be considered a reliable source by some entities while the same cannot be said about Wikipedia. Just mentioning it as a more reliable example of an online encyclopedia, is all. Aesthetics101 (talk) 18:21, 30 November 2015 (UTC)Reply

I hope to get the book next week (currently it is borrowed), then I'll let you know. Alex2006 (talk) 08:26, 3 December 2015 (UTC)Reply
I'd like to add that on page 1 of Julian Bennett's biography of Trajan he mentions that the gentilicium and cognomen Ulpius and Traianus are probably from Osco-Umbrian (Ulpius being cognate with lupus - wolf). Both are independently attested in the region, at Tuder and Ameria, the latter town likely being the origin of Trajan's mother. He goes on to say that an Italian pedigree for gens Ulpia "seems certain".--Tataryn (talk) 23:24, 6 December 2015 (UTC)Reply

GA Review

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This review is transcluded from Talk:Trajan/GA2. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Zwerg Nase (talk · contribs) 13:29, 12 January 2016 (UTC)Reply


I'll review this asap. Zwerg Nase (talk) 13:29, 12 January 2016 (UTC)Reply

Cerme Sorry that this is taking so long. You should have my review by wednesday! Zwerg Nase (talk) 14:13, 25 January 2016 (UTC)Reply

Dear Cerme, first of all, I am very sorry that this took so long. I have reviewed the text on paper two weeks ago, but did not find the time to put it all in here. Secondly, thank you for tackling this article, I find it very important that Wikipedia takes care of its vital articles, and I consider the Roman Emperors to be among them. Now for the review:

  1. It is reasonably well written.
    a (prose):   b (MoS for lead, layout, word choice, fiction, and lists):  
  2. It is factually accurate and verifiable.
    a (reference section):   b (citations to reliable sources):   c (OR):  
  3. It is broad in its coverage.
    a (major aspects):   b (focused):  
  4. It follows the neutral point of view policy.
    Fair representation without bias:  
  5. It is stable.
    No edit wars, etc.:  
  6. It is illustrated by images and other media, where possible and appropriate.
    a (images are tagged and non-free content have fair use rationales):   b (appropriate use with suitable captions):  
  7. Overall:
    Pass/Fail:  

General

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  • At one point, the name of a legion is in italics, all other instances are not. This should be done consistently.
  • There is a large number of repeated links that you should remove. To find them all easily, you can use a tool that is linked on the page I wikilinked before.

Sources

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  • From the article on the subject, I learn that the notion of the Five Good Emperors comes not only from Gibbon, but even earlier from Machiavelli. Maybe you can include this?

Early life and rise to power

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  • At the end of the second paragraph, the sentence The patria of the Ulpii was Italica, in Spanish Baetica,[8] where their ancestors had settled late in the 3rd century BC. seems like a repetition of something mentioned earlier.
  • Added a [citation needed] template there on paragraph four.
  • It does not become quite clear why Trajan was nominated as Consul. He is a guy from the province who had not held a magistrate in Rome. While clearly during the Dyarchy, these rules have softened, it would still be good to have explained why he was chosen for the highest office in Rome right away.
  • The way you introduce the possibility of his homosexuality reads very speculative to me. You should probably begin the sentence with something like Some authors have argued that Trajan had homosexual tendencies, although these accounts remain disputed. Right now it reads like he definitely was engaged in homosexual activity and we know that because he had no children, which is very presumptuous.

Roman Emperor

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  • If in reality Trajan was an autocrat, his deferential behavior towards his peers qualified him to the role of virtuous monarch - this is quite a strong statement and you should add something like "Balot argues that...".

The Correctores: Greek/Roman relations

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  • I added two [citation needed] templates here.
  • As much as Roman authorities liked to play the Greek cities against one another - you should find a more neutral way of putting this.

Conquest of Dacia

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  • and to some, shameful - who says that? A judgmental statement like that should only, if at all, included if it is directly sourced. The source that is given at the end of the sentence, to roman-emperors.org is also questionable. Can you point me to why this is a reliable source?
  • Again, I added some [citation needed] templates here.
  • whose embankments were still visible until recently - what does recently mean? You should try not to include phrases that can become outdated with time. It would be better to name a year when they were definitely visible.
  • in 106 conquered part of Dacia - either "a part" or "parts"
  • form of a gigantic spearhead - try to find a more neutral term here
  • Elaborate on what the "villa model" is.

Period of peace: public buildings and festivities

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  • ferocious beasts - again, not a very neutral term, I believe it would be enough to write "thousands of wild animals killed alongside..."

War against Parthia

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  • war hawk senators is not a neutral enough term. If an author describes them as such, write "senators, who XX described as "war hawks"..."
  • an overambitious goal that eventually backfired on the results of his entire campaign - again, too judgemental for my taste

Death and succession

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  • The first sentence of the second paragraph is a monster of Ciceronian proportions. You should divide it up into at least two sentences. I would recommend to cut of after Inferior.

Building activities

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Trajan's legacy

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  • I have not bothered putting the templates here since almost the entire section lacks references. Please do so.

Notes

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This is my biggest headache, since I have several problems:

  • There is one dead link.
  • Citations to ancient sources as generally scarce. Since a lot of secondary literature is cited, I don't consider this a huge problem, but especially where you specifically refer to ancient authors, you should give the place where they said this. If you want, you can tell me where to look and I can add references from the Loeb Classical Library, which is officially sanctioned as a reliable source for Wikipedia.
  • The biggest problem is the way you did the citations to secondary literature. You chose an approach like in an academic paper where you give the full citation on first mention, and then continue with Name, pagenumber. However, you cannot do this on Wikipedia. I would recommend that you use the Harvard Style reference template that Wikipedia offers. What you need to do is:
  • You add a ref=harv parameter to all the sources you list in References and further reading.
  • Now you can go through all of the references and exchange them with {{sfn|name of author|year|pagenumber}}. That way, all references are consistent and the reader can click on a reference and immidiately gets to the full information about the source.
  • There are almost several huge mishaps here in the reference section. Ref #30 is simply "page 231". Page 231 where?? Ref #99 is just "Dando-Collins". What is that? Please go through all the references again and sort those out.
  • There are also a lot of orthography errors in the sources, such as missed spaces or too many spaces and so forth. By using the harv-references, you should get rid of many of these, but go through everything again and check.
  • Some titles are in all caps, which you need to change on Wikipedia even if the original title was written that way.
  • You can do references like #77 or #96 (there are more instances) better. Instead of writing "Available at [link]", you can embed the link in the title by using the cite web template.
  • Generally, it seems like you never used any cite templates, which you should. I have given an example with the Heuß reference (#241) in this edit.

That's it from me. I know that especially the references will be a great load of work, but getting to know the proper ways of citing on Wikipedia will be beneficial for your future work here. I put the review on hold for now. Cheers, Zwerg Nase (talk) 15:49, 6 February 2016 (UTC)Reply

Cerme I noticed that you again did not use the sfn-template in your recent edits. Please follow the instructions above or use other cite templates available on Wikipedia. Zwerg Nase (talk) 11:13, 8 February 2016 (UTC)Reply
Okay, that will take a long time, but I agree with you that the changes proposed are absolutely necessary. Thanks a lot for the work done so far!Cerme (talk) 17:10, 8 February 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Cerme: No worries, take your time, this will be a worthy GA once all that is sorted out :) Zwerg Nase (talk) 21:49, 8 February 2016 (UTC)Reply

@Cerme: See my last two edits for how you can quite easily make the footnotes with the short footnote-template. Zwerg Nase (talk) 18:03, 12 February 2016 (UTC)Reply

Also, you do not need any inline citations in the lead, if everything is cited in the article body. Zwerg Nase (talk) 18:04, 12 February 2016 (UTC)Reply
Hi, Zwerg Nase, I have been quoting the French Hachette handbook of Roman history by Chistol & Nony, and would like to know how I could reduce a work by two authors to the ref=harv standard.Cerme (talk) 22:24, 29 February 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Cerme: I have been struggling with that a little bit myself. On the article for Senatus consultum ultimum, you can see how I did it in reference #12. More information here. Zwerg Nase (talk) 12:28, 1 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
Zwerg Nase and Cerme, I am writing to remind you that this review page has not been posted in in 20 days. It must be concluded or else the article should fail. Thank you. Display name 99 (talk) 22:07, 21 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Display name 99: Constant work is being done on the article. One big piece of bother still needs to be dealt with, but I am positive it will be within the week. Should it not, I will close the review. Zwerg Nase (talk) 22:29, 21 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
Zwerg Nase, thank you for your response. I had neglected to check the article's history, and was merely concerned by the lack of activity on the review page. Display name 99 (talk) 23:17, 21 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
Zwerg Nase and Cerme, it has now been over a week since the former of you promised to close the review should one significant problem not be fixed. It has now been over a week. The last edit made to this article was made on the 27th by the reviewer, and the last one made by the nominator was on the 24th. Zwerg Nase, has the problem been fixed? Display name 99 (talk) 01:19, 29 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
Sources are consistent in the fact that he had a predilection for young men. I don't see how this would be "disputed". It's only the pleasure of the dispute here. Frimoussou (talk) 22:54, 29 July 2017 (UTC)Reply

Close review

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Going through the article again, I had to find that while the footnote style has vastly improved, the article still lacks in several areas, even if not considering the shaky nature of Bennett's book as the primary source of the article. Several things I outline at the beginning of the review are still left undone. Grammar and punctuation have actually suffered since the first time I read the article. Also, several statements lack proper citations. That being said, I sadly fail this review now. As I have said above though, I highly encourage the nominator to work through the article again, preferably working with Strobel's biography of Trajan (if knowledge of German is there) and improve the article. Thank you for all the work done up to this part, I hope this article reaches GA status soon. Zwerg Nase (talk) 13:12, 31 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

Bennett / Strobel

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@Cerme: First of all, thank you for your work in the footnotes, it looks a lot better and more reader-friendly now!

I have now taken out the books by Bennett and Strobel from the library. It appears to me that the critique of Bennett's book is quite wide-spread: See here, here, here and here. German histiographers like Strobel, as was pointed out, seem to be even more critical than their English counterparts, whose general verdict is: A good overview from an archeologist, but with many errors stemming mostly from misinterpretation, misunderstanding or naiveté towards the sources. From an overview of these reviews of Bennett's book, I would not completely discard it as a reliable source, but be very careful on how to use it. For now, the article relies very much on Bennett and I would need to get deep into the subject matter to determine how much of a problem that is. My main concern is that Strobel asserts that Bennett was led to a general misinterpretation of Trajan's reign. If that is the case and that biased account finds itself here, it is highly problematic.

As far as I could see, it took you some time to get the formatting done, indicating that you do not have too much time on your hands at the moment? If I get into the literature more closely, it will take me a couple of days. For you then to implement changes, it will take even longer. It was righly pointed out above that this review has already taken far too long, which I have so far discarted, because you were never inactive in improving it and it is a vast topic to cover. However, with the prospect of so much work ahead, my idea would be: We close this review for now, and get to work together in making necessary improvements and then enter it for review again. What do you think?

As for the problem of citing articles from the congress collection, there are two possible options: 1) Not to use the sfn-template at that point and simply put in full references every time or 2) enter every article you use individually into the biblography, then you can use sfn with the author name again. I have met similar problems in the past, the whole reference-templates should get worked over to better suit the need of academic sources... Zwerg Nase (talk) 14:26, 29 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

@Cerme: OK, so I am facing a problem. I only have the 1997 original edition of Bennett's book, not the 2001 2nd edition you used, and they have different page numbers, so I am having a very hard time checking the references. I will nevertheless try to double-check the statements in the article backed by Bennett references against the work of Strobel to see if there are considerable differences in interpretation. I hope to get enough done today to make a first statement on wether we will be able to get this GA review to a pass this time round. Zwerg Nase (talk) 12:33, 31 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

More to do

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@Cerme: It appears that during the workover on the references, on very many places there is now no space after the reference in the prose. I took out several instances, but there are many more. Please go through the text one more time to get those all dealt with. Additionally, I have added some [citation needed] templates, where references are needed. Zwerg Nase (talk) 13:00, 31 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

Also, the claim that the Roman reception of Trajan was universally positive, does not appear to be true. Strobel writes about the works of Emperor Julian Apostata, who denounced Trajan as an "alcoholic on the Imperial throne". Zwerg Nase (talk) 13:05, 31 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
Yes, I forgot to put in the article a mention to Trajan's heavy drinking. It was public knowledge already during his lifetime, and is mentioned by Cassius Dio. I don't know wheter it marred his public image at the time - one must remember that Julian was a IVth. Century Emperor, a former Christian and a devout neopagan, writing about a IInd. Century Emperor with a completely different agenda and completely different mores. It appears that Trajan had devised an "Ulysses and the Sirens" arrangement with his staff - his request for wine were to be ignored after a certain amount of drinking.Cerme (talk) 23:28, 31 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

Trajan's death date.

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I saw death dates such as August 7, August 8, August 9, August 10 and even August 11. What is the death date today is the most accurate? — Preceding unsigned comment added by 2A02:2698:2823:2FE4:2DFA:A7F1:1117:D5A0 (talk) 14:25, 18 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

Bennett

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I just finished to read the beautiful biography of Trajan by Karl Strobel "Optimus Princeps" (in German). In the Preface the author writes that the book of Julian Bennett "Trajan. Optimus Princeps" cannot be used as a Reliable source. He writes that "in infinite places massive misinterpretations of primary sources and modern research can be discovered, which make the book generally unreliable: people who have no previous knowledge about the subject, will be misinformed in many places". Apparently the book of Bennett has been criticized by many scholars: among them "W. Eck, Scripta Classica Israelitica 17, 1998, 231-234". Despite the critics, the second edition of the book maintains all the mistakes of the first one. According to Strobel, the main problem is that Bennett (an archeologist!) does not known neither Latin nor ancient Greek, and has problem to read Italian, German and French. According to Strobel, the diffusion of the book has caused many erroneous information to be considered as true. Alex2006 (talk) 09:25, 19 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

@Alessandro57: Thanks for pointing this out! @Cerme: I will try to confirm this. If so, the article would need far more work than I initially thought. Zwerg Nase (talk) 16:54, 19 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Zwerg Nase:, you are welcome! I would like to point out that I don't want to make any polemic against Bennett, but relata refero ;-). I don't know Bennett's book, but I just read the book by Strobel, who is a well known scholar, and wrote his biography about Trajan during two leaves of absence at the Institute for Advanced Studies in Princeton. Alex2006 (talk) 17:09, 19 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Zwerg Nase:, that's important. I read Bennett's book, and his main interest - as should be expected from an archaeologist - are Trajan's buildings (The Column, the Arch in Beneventum, the Roman Forum, and so on) about which he offers the most detailed information. In his general account of Trajan's reign, as far as I can gather, he says nothing that struck me as outlandish, bizarre or controversial, only as a very conventional historical narrative. Veyne, on the other hand, offers a far more controversial interpretation of issues like the alimenta, Trajan's "ideology" and so on - as should be expected from a French postmodern historian and a friend of Foucault's.... Does Strobel point, in his book,to any particular points in Bennett's account? In the affirmative case, which ones?Cerme (talk) 21:11, 19 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Cerme: All what Strobel says about Bennett, I reported above. I should maybe also add that Bennett's book is not used as reference by Strobel, but this is obvious, after what he wrote. I think that one should read the Review of Werner Eck which Strobel cites above (Werner Eck, Review of Julian Bennett, Trajan, Optimus Princeps. A Life and Times: XVII, 231. ), in order to understand more about Bennett's "zahllose Fehler". Alex2006 (talk) 09:44, 20 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Alessandro 57:I'm concerned at the moment with the Roman Empire map presented in the article, which is attributed to Bennett. The Bennett map is much more sketchy - and, therefore, in my view, more accurate as far as historical authorities are concerned. I'm upset with the fact that the article's map includes Susa into the Roman Empire - something for which there is the scantiest evidence and which appears to me as extrmely improbable. Fact is, Trajan's Mesopotamian "conquests" amounted as far as we know to a very temporary Roman occupation of Southern Mesopotamian, and it's daring to affirm (unless there is some conclusive archaeological evidence) that an already overextended Roman army could stretch outside of Mesopotamia into Susa. Fact is that the maximum extent ever of the Roman Empire, in terms of permanent conquests, was attained under Septimius Severus, not under Trajan- something that should mentioned in the article, plus the fact that a map of the Roman Empire under Trajan should tell between permanent conquests (Dacia) and temporary ones (Armenia & Mesopotamia). Cerme (talk) 19:54, 26 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
I stated years ago that a map of the empire under Severus would be more appropriate, but was rejected. Apparently it's because so many sources say Trajan's empire was the largest yadah yadah so we can't do OR and say it wasn't. About Susa, doing a quick search on Google Books brings up numerous secondary sources stating the Romans captured Susa, but I'm not sure where they're getting that from, either Dio or the Historia Augusta? Apparently troops pursued Osroes there and took a bunch of his stuff. Unless there's modern secondary sources saying that the Romans didn't take Susa, the sheer weight of two centuries of secondary sources saying the Romans indeed took it outweighs our speculation. I have no horse in this race, though, and would be happy to edit the current map based upon the outcome of a lengthy discussion amongst the experts we have around here.--Tataryn (talk) 22:04, 26 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Alessandro57 Can you quote anything specific that Strobel says about errors in Bennett? You said "All what Strobel says about Bennett, I reported above", but from what I can see, there's nothing specific mentioned – which would seem rather unacademic for an author to blast Bennett for errors but never elaborate.--Tataryn (talk) 22:45, 26 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
@talkYes, many secondary sources say that Trajan took Susa, but they never state where they got that from. Besides, there is the problem that Susa at the Early Second Century was probably a backwater far away from Mesopotamia, and stating that Trajan took it appears to me as a bit of epic exaggeration by means of a fictive throwback to the age of Alexander the Great, as in the bogus epic poem in Petronius' Satyricon stating that Pompey the Great crossed the Indus River. As far as the actual extent of the Roman Empire at the end of Trajan's reign goes, the map in the German Wikipedia appears to me as the most accurate single piece available (In the French Wikipedia, there is a whole Power Point presentation on the Parthian Wars)Cerme (talk) 18:48, 27 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
The map on the German article has significant errors. The map does not show Charax as being part of Trajan's conquests. It shows Sarmizegetusa as being in the Wallachian plain – and the Romans did not hold the Wallachian plain for any real period of time. It also does not show Porolissum as being part of the province of Dacia. The province of Mauretania Tingitania did not extend that far south along the Atlantic coast. The Nabataean region is also completely wrong. It does not show Leuce Come or any of the more distant settlements as being part of the Empire. The map doesn't show Ammonium in Egypt as part of the empire either. All these errors make the map wholly inaccurate, much more so than the current map which is pretty much accurate on all fronts except the possibility that Susa was not part of Trajan's conquests. When I say "the map does not show...", I don't mean that those cities are not labelled, I mean that the territory depicted does not encompass the area where those places would be labelled if they were. Also, that French power point actually shows Susa as being captured by the Romans, so I'm not sure what you were getting at by referring to it.--Tataryn (talk) 20:01, 27 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
Yes, my bad.Sorry. The German map had the advantage of showing Charax outside the Roman Empire, as the sources tells that the Characene king submitted to Trajan as client king. But then it has Sarmizegetusa in the wrong place (the Wallachian plain as part of the Empire is to be admitted , IMHO, as long as it was abandoned by Hadrian and not by Trajan). As to the French map, it has the advantage of being more of a map of military operations - but then it has Susa, again.... In the end, we have to settle with the existing map, in that it is not more inaccurate than the other alternatives. The only issue is that the map shown in the article is unproperly sourced, as it is not a copy, in any meaningful sense, of the map sketched by Bannett. That should be admitted and the map properly sourced.Cerme (talk) 21:20, 27 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

I'll add some sources during the coming week, it shouldn't be too difficult. It should be noted that tons of ancient maps here on wikipedia have zero sources. For example those at the Sassanid Empire, Achaemenid Empire, Parthian Empire, Roman Republic, etc. etc. So after this week the Roman Empire map will be sourced better than vast majority of maps around here. Should we go to those articles listed above (and any articles with unsourced maps) and start demanding sources?--Tataryn (talk) 21:49, 27 March 2016 (UTC)Reply

Absolutely, I think. Ancient History maps reflect the state of the arts in terms of actual historical knowledge ammassed and should not reflect preconceived notions about Ancient societies. There is a tendency, I think, to make the Roman Empire even more "grand" than it actually was. Cerme (talk) 22:30, 27 March 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Cerme, sorry for the delay in my answer, but I was in vacation in the capital of the Empire ;-) . Concerning maps, I always use the historic atlas by de Agostini, and there Susa lies far away from the Empire's border: at its latitude, the border of the provincia Mesopotamia was the Tigris. I also agree with you that Trajan's conquests in modern Iraq, Caucasus and southeast Turkey where temporary: anyway, a lot of sources affirm the the greatest extension of the Empire occurred under him. @Tataryn please read all my edits, not only the last one. We need access to the source where Bennett's mistakes are described in details. I will ask an experienced user and friend of mine, who possibly has online access. Valete ;-) Alex2006 (talk) 11:48, 9 April 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Alex2006 Alessandro, I feel that , in reviewing the article so as to achieve GA status, we must keep track of the changes in outlook brought by modern historiography. In the sources I searched for, Susa is included in Trajan's conquest only in XIXth. Century books. Also, the notion that Susa was the "summer capital" of the Parthian Empire is a creative anachronism coming from the notion that Trajan was the equal of Alexander the Great and therefore Parthia was the continuation of Darius' Persian Empire. As Trajan was a senatorial emperor, and Septimius Severus a military one, Ancient sources expanded Trajan's achievments and deflated Severus', whose province of (Northern) Mesopotamia was a permanent conquest that remained in the Empire for at least a half century (Trajan's conquests, otherwise, actually lasted a few months). What I found in the way of conffirming Trajan's conquests was that Parthian Susa was an Hellenistic (Seleucid) foundation which traded with Charax, and , therefore that Trajan might have envisaged a raid on Susa in order to control an important trade route - but with that we are in the realm of the (barely) possible. All this must , I feel, be kept track of somehow in the final text.Cerme (talk) 17:16, 10 April 2016 (UTC)Reply
@Cerme, thanks for your explanation! I checked Strobel again, and there is no mention of Susa's conquest. Alex2006 (talk) 17:43, 10 April 2016 (UTC)Reply

Fixed the map. Thanks for all the insight!--Tataryn (talk) 21:54, 10 April 2016 (UTC)Reply

Pronunciation

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According to the lead "Trajan" is pronounced /ˈtreɪdʒən/ which seems like a particularly Anglicised pronunciation. If that is the case it should probably be noted (probably just by adding |lang|pron to the IPAc-en template, which would render as English: /ˈtrən/). I have looked about a bit and while it does seem to be fairly commonplace, I cannot find a source for it that I'd call authoritative. It also seems to be pronounced differently in French (where it seems to be something like /ˈtʁaʒɔ̃/).

I'd also be curious to know what the basis for the pronunciation is, since from what I can tell (mostly based on the Latin spelling and pronunciation article), a standard pronunciation of his name in Latin would be /ˈtraːjaːnʊs/ or /ˈtraːjjaːnʊs/, which is pretty far removed from /ˈtreɪdʒən/. While most of it can be easily explained using standard English phonology/pronunciation rules, on the face of it see no reason why the first vowel should be /eɪ/ rather than /aː/ (as I would expect it to be) and certainly see no reason why it would be more "correct" or "valid" (therefore justifying the pronunciation guide). Is there some standard Latin → English conversion that it uses or is it just convention? Alternatively, is the name Trajan simply an English equivalent to Tráiánus that I am unfamiliar with (e.g. due to it having fallen out of popular use)?

Alphathon /'æɫ.fə.θɒn(talk) 18:23, 29 December 2016 (UTC)Reply

Um. Don't be silly. Nobody I'm aware of writes Trāiānus or says /traːˈjaːnʊs/ in English, and it would be odd to do so. Exonyms exist for good reasons (you didn't even get the Latin stress correct, which is telling), even if many people are confused about this point these days and have misguidedly come to believe that they are "wrong". And all or most Latin names ending in -ānus are Anglicised this way still nowadays, by dropping the -us ending and pronouncing the result as if it were English. /aː/ isn't even an English phoneme, for crying out loud. Why should any native speaker of English needlessly import it? --Florian Blaschke (talk) 01:41, 1 January 2017 (UTC)Reply
@Alphathon: This is English wikipedia, so the Latin and French pronunciations (and spellings) are irrelevant. We don't pronounce 'Paris' or 'France' anything like the French do, nor do we pronounce 'Julius Caesar' like the Romans did, with a hard-k like in Kaiser. The only relevant issue is how the majority of reliable sources in English pronounce it, and we already know the answer to that. Mathglot (talk) 23:54, 17 April 2017 (UTC)Reply
I think you've both misunderstood me somewhat. I am well aware of what an exonym is and am neither claiming that we should all call him Trāiānus, nor pronounce Trajan as if it were Latin. My points are:
  • Since this is an exonym, it should probably be noted in the lead that the pronunciation is for the English form (probably just using lang|pron| in the {{IPAc-en}} template). The Latin name's pronunciation should probably also be provided alongside for clarity. (The French form is largely irrelevant and was merely presented for comparison.) For comparison, see the many articles on cities with English exonyms (e.g. from the lead of Cologne:  Cologne (English: /kəˈln/; German: Köln, pronounced [kœln] , Kölsch: Kölle [ˈkœɫə] ) ). This would be something like  Trajan (English: /ˈtrən/; Latin: ...Traianus..., Latin pronunciation: [...traːˈjaːnʊs...] . Of course it would probably be somewhat cumbersome to transcribe the long form name Imperator Caesar Nerva Traianus Divi Nervae filius Augustus and I'm not sure there's a good solution to that. It may also be worth noting that the article on Julius Caesar has the Latin pronunciation in the lead (and only the Latin, not that that should form a basis for what this article says of course).
  • What is the basis for the English pronunciation? Is it merely a convention due to common use? Is it actually an English name that has fallen out of common use? Is it a result of spelling pronunciation (which I suspect is how the afore mentioned Caesar shifted)? Is it based on some systematic way of converting Latin names to English? (Of particular interest to me is the vowel /eɪː/, since /ɑː/ (the a in father in standard dialects) is far closer to the original /aː/, at least to my ear. Note that I make no reference to the difference between the English /dʒ/ and the Latin /j/ nor the missing -us since their origins are fairly self-evident.) This part is largely just personal curiosity, but may affect how the text in the lead is worded.
@Mathglot: I know that what is important is how reliable sources pronounce it but as I mentioned I wasn't able to find any and the current IPA has no citation (or at least no inline citation). (This of course doesn't make it false.) Regardless, I didn't claim that it was false but merely that it ran counter to my expectations. If anything I was asking for a source (although I didn't explicitly say so). (In fact that's part of what brought me here: I have read the name many times but only recently heard it spoken and thought "That doesn't sound right: why is it being pronounced /eɪː/?" I then came here and found the same pronunciation asserted but unsourced.) Unfortunately most written sources, which is what is mostly available via search engines etc, don't seem to mention the pronunciation (or at least not that I've been able to find).
@Florian Blaschke: it is somewhat unhelpful to dismiss other users out of hand like that, particularly when you don't even address the point(s) raised. (Whether intentional or not, you are attacking a straw man). What I wrote was "[…] seems like a particularly Anglicised pronunciation. If that is the case it should probably be noted […]" and "I'd also be curious to know what the basis for the pronunciation is, since [it is quite different than the original Latin and modern French]". I in no way claimed that we should be saying Traianus, merely that there is a surprising disparity between the original Latin and the (supposed) modern English pronunciation. It's also worth noting that /aː/ is in fact an English phoneme, just one that doesn't appear in either standard British or American English.
Alphathon /'æɫ.fə.θɒn(talk) 13:20, 20 April 2017 (UTC)Reply
You can search Google for "pronunciation of Trajan" and find as many websites as you like, all of which agree on the pronunciation. Anglicized or not is irrelevant, the quesetion is, how do we pronounce it? How do you pronounce 'flamboyant' or 'et cetera'? Mathglot (talk) 09:48, 22 April 2017 (UTC)Reply
So what? These kinds of disparities are ubiquitous in English. For example, in English, you've also got "Ptolemy" and "Galen" rather than "Ptolemaeus" and "Galenus". It follows common English conventions, such as dropping endings like -us and then reading the result with English spelling-to-pronuncation rules. (These conventions are largely influenced by French and its treatment of Latinisms, by the way. And then by sound replacements that regularly occur when borrowing French words into Middle English, and later by sound changes within English such as the Great Vowel Shift. You can trace this in detail because it's all part of well-documented history, but debating the details would be excessive.) In fact, the original pronunciation in Classical Latin wasn't even known prior to the 20th century, when it was reconstructed in detail by the likes of W. Sidney Allen. --Florian Blaschke (talk) 00:27, 26 July 2024 (UTC)Reply
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GA Review

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Reviewer: Векочел (talk · contribs) 03:31, 5 June 2019 (UTC)Reply


Cerme, there are still some uncited sentences. Векочел (talk) 20:03, 6 June 2019 (UTC)Reply

Passing Векочел (talk) 06:23, 21 June 2019 (UTC)Reply

GA Review

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Article is adequately written and it summarizes the topic well. Sources are also plentiful. It is stable and illustrated by appropriate images as well. Overall I give this article a pass.

LivinAWestLife (talk) 11:13, 19 June 2019 (UTC)Reply

Individual reassessment

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GA Reassessment

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This discussion is transcluded from Talk:Trajan/GA4. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the reassessment.

The review was painfully inadequate and unsatisfactory at only 4 vague sentences about it being "well-written" and "illustrated". How can an article be Good with 7 unaddressed citation needed templates and multiple dead links? That is an immediate failure of Good Article criteria. The amount of sources doesn’t equate to Good quality (obviously). Trillfendi (talk) 21:15, 21 June 2019 (UTC)Reply

GA Review

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Reviewer: Iazyges (talk · contribs) 09:12, 12 August 2019 (UTC)Reply

Will start soon. Iazyges Consermonor Opus meum 09:12, 12 August 2019 (UTC)Reply

Criteria

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GA Criteria

GA Criteria:

  • 1
    1.a  Y
    1.b  Y
  • 2
    2.a  Y
    2.b  Y
    2.c  Y
    2.d  Y (Has a high false-positive due to sharing a quote with a source).
  • 3
    3.a  Y
    3.b  Y
  • 4
    4.a  Y
  • 5
    5.a  Y
  • 6
    6.a  Y
    6.b  Y
  • No DAB links  Y
  • No dead links  N:
    "Olivier Hekster, "Propagating power: Hercules as an example for second-century emperors". Herakles and Hercules. Exploring a Graeco-Roman Divinity (2005): 205-21.Available at [13][dead link] Retrieved March 17, 2017"
    R. P. Longden, "Notes on the Parthian Campaigns of Trajan". The Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 21 (1931), pp. 1–35. Available at [11]. Retrieved November 15, 2014
    Suggest using Wayback machine to archive all the non-dead links.
  • No missing citations  Y
  • @Cerme:, dead link issues need to be addressed before article review can proceed. Iazyges Consermonor Opus meum 12:30, 16 August 2019 (UTC)Reply

Dead links taken away and new links provided Cerme (talk) 00:03, 19 August 2019 (UTC)Reply

Discussion

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Please help me with this.Many thanks in advance!Cerme (talk) 00:04, 19 August 2019 (UTC)Reply

@Cerme: I'm going off to college later this week; I can't promise how active I can be from now on, so I thought it only fair to tell you. I'm happy to continue the review if you're OK with that, or let someone more active take it if you'd prefer. -- Iazyges Consermonor Opus meum 00:00, 21 August 2019 (UTC)Reply

Prose Suggestions

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Please note that all of these are suggestions, and can be implemented or ignored at your discretion.

Taking over this review and passing now Векочел (talk) 23:11, 30 August 2019 (UTC)Reply

تارجان هو ملك الرمان القديمة — Preceding unsigned comment added by 41.200.113.178 (talk) 17:38, 21 January 2021 (UTC)Reply

Unsourced and fantastical

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I just removed a completely fantastical, unsourced interpretation of Cassius Dio's account of Trajan's games, and rewrote the section. His is, as far I know, the only primary account. Well, at least primary-ish. I bring the relevant diff here because the misinformation survived, unsourced and unchallenged, since April, 2006, and through at least two, and possibly three GA reviews. Nobody noticed. That should be food for thought. Haploidavey (talk) 14:00, 10 June 2022 (UTC)Reply

Reliably sourced?

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The following was added, starting on Decenber 30, 2021, by the author of the cited work. The first sentence is rather essay-like, and I daresay other points of view are possible; but my main concern is with the source's status as reliable and its recent publication date (2022). It's a first edition, published by a subsidiary of Pen and Sword. It has had no serious, published peer-reviews. The author is not a professional historian; this is his only publication in the field, but according to its preface, he consulted several very reputable historians during its writing (all specialists on the topic). He has used the book to source various sections in various related articles, with no page numbers or edit summaries but lots of goodwill; it doesn't feel spammy to me. I'm not advocating for or against retention, but would like editorial opinions as the cited work is now thoroughly entangled in long sections of text, some of which I've rewritten. I've notified the author\editor about my concerns, on their talk page. Haploidavey (talk) 09:53, 12 June 2022 (UTC)Reply

  • Overall, one can summarize Trajan’s justification for war based on five factors: recent Dacian aggression against Rome; an unsatisfactory peace settlement between Dacia and Rome that included Roman subsidies; a dangerous flow of Roman deserters over to Dacia able to better train the Dacians against Roman tactics; the promise of plentiful booty; and the growing threat of destabilization in the Danube region given potential alliances between Dacia and surrounding tribes.[2]
I'm removing this para; it relies on the single source questioned above, and as yet there's no evidence for scholarly reviews. The article doesn't, imho, need such a summary. The possible reasons are in the text, dealt with one at a time. As nobody (the author included) has thought fit to support the removal or inclusion of the cited source, I'm taking a cautious approach, and removing it. Haploidavey (talk) 08:46, 29 July 2022 (UTC)Reply
Sorry for responding belatedly. I think this is a tricky issue, especially given that the material was added to the article by the author... But I don't think all the other points that you raise stand up. Peer review happens during a book's publication by an academic press, not afterwards, so reviews published in journals are not necessary for a book to be an RS. While Pen & Sword is uneven, I think it counts as an academic press (other works by them are regularly reviewed, including works by this Greenhill subsidiary: [3]). While there's potentially an issue of self-promotion when an author adds material from their own book to a wiki article, we also do want subject experts to edit wikipedia. So, I wouldn't be opposed to reinstating the text. Furius (talk) 00:35, 30 July 2022 (UTC)Reply
Furius, thanks. This would not be the first time I've misunderstood the whole peer-review process. I've already held a conversation with the author of the book at his talk page, voicing my concerns. I'm no longer so sure, and will reinstate the paragraph I removed - I still don't think it neccesary (see my edit summary inthe article history, explaining removal) but under the circumstances it's probably best if I restore the para and then leave things as they are. Haploidavey (talk) 06:20, 30 July 2022 (UTC)Reply
Discussion is under way at: Wikipedia:Reliable sources/Noticeboard#New Emperor Trajan book - reliable source

A Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for deletion

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The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page or its Wikidata item has been nominated for deletion:

Participate in the deletion discussion at the nomination page. —Community Tech bot (talk) 03:22, 18 February 2023 (UTC)Reply

Faulty link?

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In the article’s lead, the link building projects just leads to the main article Trajan. Is this a mistake? 46.15.226.232 (talk) 11:27, 3 March 2023 (UTC)Reply

Good catch - it should be working now! Furius (talk) 23:00, 3 March 2023 (UTC)Reply

Details on Trajan's origins

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User:Venezia Friulano, I have (once again) reverted your edits and this time I have also expanded on Trajan's origins so that everything is clear. Your claims go against the evidence we have and what historians write in their biographies on Trajan. You wrote:

The fact that Trajan was born in a Roman city that was founded centuries by Italic settlers is not proof that he himself is of Italic origin. It is a fallacious argument.


1-Trajan's hometown of Italica was an Italic settlement in Hispania, it's in her name. It was inhabited by descendants of the original Italic founders (they did not stop reproducing themselves) and by new and recurrent waves of Italic migrants. This is explicetely stated by Bennet, Gabba, Mommsen, Birley and others. Obviously we can assume that it was also inhabited by the nearby locals (the Iberian Turdetani) and that there was intermarriage, but this doesn't change the fact that it also continued to be an Italic settlement, just like we keep calling Greek colonies Greek settlements even if they were also partially inhabited by non-Greek peoples. Your theory that it stopped being an Italic settlement 'cause centuries passed by is not found in these sources I consulted; in fact they say the opposite and stress that the leading families in Italica all retained various types of connections with Rome and Italy at large (e.g. leading men were sent there to rule over parts of Spain), and in fact this may be one of the reasons why they attracted new families in (for the purpose of political marriages).

2-Unsurprisingly, Trajan, being born in Italica, was of Italic origins and we can trace these origins back to a specific town in Umbria (Tuder). Contrary to what you say, there is overwhelming archeological, epigraphic, linguistic, and literary proof for it. This is stated as "certain" by Bennet at page 1 (one) of his biography on Trajan. It is again stated by Birley. And by Hasmond, Maj, Chase etc. etc. Syme says that the assertion of Trajan being Iberian is "baseless". One minor historian only, Alicia M. Canto, supports a fringe view that the Trajans were Iberian Turdetani in origin, but she herself says in her work that the consensus is the one above. In fact the major historians on Trajan say the opposite and the evidence they collected goes against her claim (which btw, she herself has introduced on wikipedia on the Italica page, otherwise it does not appear in the major works on Trajan and Hadrian used as sources here).

I have included the reasoning of the aforementioned authors in the article, please be open to the evidence. There is no way around this, the more I look and the more i find, but they all say the same thing. If this is not enough for you I can include other sources, with even more details on the matter.

Barjimoa (talk) 09:20, 18 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

I have not said that Italica was not a settlement of Italic origin, nor that Trajan is only of Iberian ancestry.
I do not understand the point of this huge text.User:Venezia Friulano 09:43, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
We should not give WP:UNDUE emphasis to a fringe opinion. I think the additions tend in that direction. Furius (talk) 09:13, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I agree with Furius. This paper should be mentioned (with due weight, of course) in a possible future article on the origins of Trajan. Read WP:UNDUE on this matter. Alex2006 (talk) 09:19, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I don't mind what weight you want to give it. In fact, I haven't even added Canto's opinion.
The point is that to imply that Trajan was exclusively Italic (without any hint of a minimal root or ancestry in Iberia), is ridiculous at best. It is not supported or claim by any historian and is more typical of an Italian nationalist campaign, that for some reason, it bothers that he was an emperor born outside of Italia. Venezia Friulano (talk) 09:38, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Sorry, maybe I am mixing things up. Who wrote this: "Alternatively, one author has argued that the Traii ancestors of Trajan were a family of indigenous Iberian Turdetani rather than Italic settlers." And what do "Italian nationalists" have to do with the origins of a Roman Emperor? Alex2006 (talk) 09:50, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
The only agenda here, wheter on purpose or not, is in your edits and commentary. The Iberic origins of Trajan are a fringe view, the Italic origins are the overhwelming consensus mentioned and stressed in the first pages of every biography or article on Trajan. Just look at what the sources say, Venezia, not at what you think. The Ulpii Traiani came from Tuder in Umbria, period; that they perhaps married locals (we dont even know, the only thing we know is that the Ulpii maried the Traii) does not change that they came from Italy. And Trajan was part of this Italic family, we don't care and don't kown if he had an Iberic aunt or an Iberic grandma, in any case they would have been assimiliated into the Ulpii Traiani, so the LINEAGE is Italic and goes back to Tuder, is that clear? Let's not play with words: calling Trajan "also of Italic ancestry" and Italica "also of Italic origins" gives the wrong idea to readers, cause it may suggest Italica was a town of the Turdetani and Trajan of Iberian origins. Italica was an Italic settlement and Trajan of Italic origins. That's what is certain and what historians write, the rest is theories. I'm not against mentioning those theories, but they should not have equal footing with the consensus. Again, it's on the very first pages of every biography on Trajan.Barjimoa (talk) 09:53, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
This discussion was already done eight years ago (please read it above, in the "Origins" thread) and the consensus is that Trajano is Italic. Whether or not he had a Hispanic mother, aunts or grandmothers does not change that one iota, and the reason has been well explained above. The consensus regarding Canto's paper is that it does not go in the article, as it is WP:FRINGE (on the reasons, also read the thread above). Alex2006 (talk) 10:17, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
And what's frustrating is that we have debated this so much, when scholars in academia have absoluetely solved this issue among the many regarding Trajan. It is really not suprising that someone literally born in "Italica" was Italic. Barjimoa (talk) 10:30, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I understand that you would have liked Trajan to be born in Italia, but I'm sorry, Trajan was born and raised in Hispania, as were his father and many of his ancestors.
It's pretty irrelevant what his last name is. He is rather more Hispanic than Italic, since Trajan's origins are where he was born and grew up. Everything else is a pretty obvious Italian nationalism with high copium. A greeting. Venezia Friulano (talk) 13:46, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
We are not saying he was born in Italia; we are saying he was born in Italica, where Italic settlers where, and his lineage has even been reconstructed back to a specific place in Italy. "You have high copium" is not an argument. I am literally only repeating what the sources say, what has Italian nationalism have to do with this?? You do understand your reply is grotesque, right? As for the names...the names are one important aspect to reconstruct his family's origins. As are the demographics of his hometown Italica, the epigraphic attestations in Umbria, and the informations given us by Sextus Victor. He was born in Hispania (no one claims otherwise) but he was of Italic origins, period. The evidence is overwhelming. He was not "more Hispanic than Italic", what does that even mean? That is YOUR view, not what every single major historian on Trajan state: they say the Ulpi Traii came from Italy to an Italic settlement in Spain. This is the consensus of historians and this is the consensus on wikipedia. So please stop distorting the informations.Barjimoa (talk) 14:48, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Trajan was Hispano Roman, and had Iberian and Italic origins, both. Thats the reality. You are trying to imply that Trajan was exclusively Italic, which is false and an obvious nationalistic bent.
Trajan was born and raised in Hispania, like his father, also his wife was a Hispanic, and in a multitude of sources (some in the article itself) it is suggested (as is obvious) that it is very likely that at some point Trajan's ancestors also mixed with the romanized native Iberian population. In fact, there is no source or historian that claims that Trajan was of exclusively Italic origin.
According to your logic, Pablo Picasso should be considered Italian instead of Spanish because he had Italian ancestors who moved to Spain, right? It's completely ridiculous.
Look, I have enormously respected your edits, unlike you, who think you own this article, but believe me, you're not going to fool anyone by Italianizing Trajan, you're wasting your time on this.
The fact that Trajan was Hispanic and the first emperor born outside of Italia generates disgust in Italy for purely nationalist reasons, but it is not something you can change. I'm sorry. Venezia Friulano (talk) 19:34, 19 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I don't want to fool anyone, cause I am literally just copying what other authors have written, I personally have no interest in this and if an Italian nationalist came to write non-sense I would revert him in a second (starting from the fact that an ancient Italic is different from a modern Italian). The point is: one thing is the birthplace, one thing is the lineage. Claudius was born in Gaul, but he was not a Celt. Trajan was born in Hispania, but was not an Iberian. Their lineage was Italic and they could trace their origins back to specific places. See, for example, Bennett's reasoning. He states Trajan's family came from Italy and settled in Hispania; does he say that in Hispania their Italic-ness ended? No, he says the opposite. They continued to have an Italic pedigree, and marry with Italic families, and forge alliances with families in Italy. He also states it's possible Trajan also had local ancestors, and so does the Wikipedia article here. But his second assumption is not in constrast with the first. Cause 1)what's known and proven (the people we can name) is the Italic lineage 2)even if Trajan had multiple Iberian ancestors, as many as you can imagine, they were the ones absorbed into the Italic family, they went to live in Italica and they became Ulpii Traii, not the other way around. With Picasso we are in the opposite situation: Picasso was not born in a place settled by Italians; his family became Spanish, whereas Trajan's family did not become Iberian. Your argument seems to end at Trajan being born in Hispania; yes he certainly was, but where? from whom? what do we know about his family? where did they came from? etc. The conclusion reached by his biographers is that Trajan was born in Spain he had his roots in Italy, and his hometown of Italica is the link between the two.Barjimoa (talk) 01:35, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I honestly think you have a very narrow and deviated concept of "origin". No source claims some things you have written above. Part by part:
To begin with, Trajan is not Iberian? How is it so? Trajan was born in the Iberian Peninsula and yet he is not Iberian according to you? What I assume you mean is that he is not an individual belonging to the ancient Iberian tribes. Trajan was born in Iberia (as was a large part of his family) and he is without a doubt Iberian.
Second, we know Trajan's Italo-Roman lineage, Ulpii Traiani, but you are making a huge mistake in implying that knowing a particular Lineage is synonymous with Origin. Indeed Trajan has a traceable lineage to Italia, but that does not imply that Trajan is exclusively of Italic origins since part of his ancestors mixed with natives (which is extremely logical) as many sources point out. There is no source that affirms that Trajan is exclusively Italic, many sources suggest that he also had autochtonous origins and ancestors.
Third, and this connect with the second, just because the native Iberian population became Romanized does not mean that the "ceased" to exist or become Italic-ish. Similarly, although Trajan's native ancestors would merged with Italic Ulpii Traiani does not imply that Trajan somehow lost Hispanic origins. For example, the fact that a South American has ancestors that were Spanish Conquistadors/Settlers or a Lineage traceable to Spain does not mean that this South American is of exclusively Iberian origin, but that it is also very likely that he is of Native American origin. Whether or not his native ancestors merged into the Spanish stream, surnames, or culture does not eliminate his native origins.
And finally, I tell you exactly what Trajan was: Born in Iberia (Iberian), a Hispano-Roman with ancestors and origins in Italia and Hispania. That is the agreed reality in the canonical historiography of Trajan.
To affirm that he was absolutely and purely of Italic origin and to blur his connections or origins with Iberia and Hispania is, to say the least, erroneous. It's also a waste of time to fight for this since Trajan is much better known for being Hispanic (Hispania Baetica), the first Roman emperor born outside of Italia, than for having a surname traceable to Umbria.

[3][4][5][6]

References

  1. ^ Neugebauer, Otto, Ethiopic Astronomy and Computus [Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, philosophisch-historische Klasse, Sitzungsberichte 347 (Veröffentlichungen der Kommission für Geschichte der Mathematik, Naturwissenschaften und Medizin 22); Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1979], esp. pp. 33 and 99.
  2. ^ Jackson, Nicholas (2022). Trajan: Rome's Last Conqueror (1st ed.). Chapter: First Dacian War: GreenHill Books. ISBN 978-1784387075.
  3. ^ "Trajan’s selection as emperor by Nerva set an important precedent for Rome’s rulers. A military commander with Spanish roots, Trajan was the first emperor born outside Italy" https://www.nationalgeographic.com/culture/article/trajan
  4. ^ Bryn Mawr College https://scholarship.tricolib.brynmawr.edu › ... The First Spanish Emperors: Trajan, Hadrian, and Roman Hispanic...
  5. ^ "Trajan (Marcus Ulpius Traianus, Italica 53 – Selinus 117) was the first Iberian Roman emperor." https://blog.bham.ac.uk/estoriadigital/2019/10/21/text-2-elena-caetano-alvarez-discusses-trajan/
  6. ^ "Although his ancestors, whether or not original settlers, were undoubtedly Roman, or at least Italian, they may well have intermarried with natives." https://www.britannica.com/biography/Trajan

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Venezia Friulano (talk) 06:44, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
National geographic, popular histories, and a blog do not beat the consensus of specialized historians on Trajan (also you can see the non-specialized sources you posted are full of mistakes and leads you to make mistakes: Trajan was not the first emperor born outside of Italy, that would be Claudius); and that the Trajans possibly intermarried with natives is written in this article. First of all let's clarify that the historiography unquestionably say what I have told you and we have enough detailed research on the matter to assert it. If that's a narrow view for you, then you should blame the historians, not me. Bennett and Syme (and I have quoted them word by word, look at the notes) explicetely deny the definition of Trajan as an Iberian. The term "Iberi(greek)/Hispani(latin)" denoted the peoples of the Iberian peninsula: one person was not part of such groups only for being born in that region, since they could be instead (as in this case) from a group settled there. "Hispano-Romans" (like Gallo-Roman) denotes Romanized indigenous peoples (native Iberi who got Roman citizenship); so just like we don't refer to Claudius as a Gallo-Roman, we do not refer to Trajan as an Hispano-Roman (it would mean he is from a Romanized Hispanic family, and that's not the case, Canto's view only). The correct way to phrase it is that Trajan was a Roman of Italic lineage born in Hispania (here I can agree with your point that lineage is a more precise word than the broader "origin").Barjimoa (talk) 08:13, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Well, let's go over definitions because it seems you also have quite a deviant concept of some of them:
- Iberian: noun
1. a native of Iberia, especially in ancient times.
- Hispanic (In the historical context) is someone belonging to or related to Hispania. Being Hispanus if is someone who is a native of Hispania with no foreign parents, while children born in Hispania of Roman parents were Hispanienses.
1) Trajan is native of Iberia. You have no point in denying that Trajan was Iberian. Maybe he didnt belong to the ancient pre-Roman tribes of Iberia (called Hispani by the Romans), but he is Iberian whether you like it more or less.
2) Trajan was born in the Roman province of Hispania, therefore it can also be considered Hispanic, or more specifically Hispaniense.
Trajan has a traceable lineage to Italia, but that dont exclude that he is Iberian and Hispanic (Hispaniense). I understand that you are Italian, I know first-hand the current nationalism present in Italy, and it is understandable that you want to defend yours, but dont try to twist reality because it makes you uncomfortable.
By definition, not my opinion, Trajan was Iberian (and Hispaniense) with Italic ancestors/lineage and quite possibly also autochthonous ancestors. Venezia Friulano (talk) 16:32, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Again with this grotesque argument of Italian nationalism...you are obsessed about it...That being said, Hispaniensis is actually not wrong...but this is how Bennett defines it: "strictly speaking, Trajan was an Hispaniensis, an Italian domiciled or born in Spain, not an Hispanus". I think we can incorporate this information (I won't include the term Italian since we are favoring Italic, that's how much an Italian nationalist I am...) Barjimoa (talk) 19:11, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I think you're showing how lax Bennett is on this subject: "An Italian domiciled in Spain..."
What a description of Trajan... I don't know if we are talking about Ancient Rome or about the summer vacation plans of a modern Italian in the Canary Islands, Spain. This is not serious...
Trajan undoubtedly had an Italic family or gens, (I dont share, nor did I know, Canto's vision) but his father and a large part of his family was born and raised, like him, in Iberia. It is not ethical or historically rigorous to water down the relationship between Trajan and Hispania in such a crude way. Let's not pretend now to consider Trajan almost as Italian as Dante Alighieri. Venezia Friulano (talk) 19:53, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I agree the word "Italian" instead of "Italic" is questionable, but Bennett remains one of the greatest authorities on Trajan. Change the word Italian with Italic and his point is correct. Barjimoa (talk) 20:07, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
I do not agree that Bennet is an authority on Trajan, I honestly think that falls within a highly subjectivity. Anyway, from the way he expresses himself on the subject... Spain was also far from existing, it is unnecessary to mention Spain, and "domiciled" is a rather grotesque term, It completely misrepresents Trajan and his biography. Venezia Friulano (talk) 20:20, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

User:Venezia Friulano, current version incorporates two suggestions you made, with the words of Bennett (note that the Bennett quote I've inserted in the reference note goes actually way further than what I wrote: he says Trajan was "Italian" and of Italian "origins"; instead I wrote that he was "Italic by lineage"). If you stop changing words and accept this equilibrium then this is fine to me as well. Can we end it here?Barjimoa (talk) 20:01, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

I think Bennet's terminology speaks for itself, but not exactly in a positive way.
To speak of Trajan as an Italian domiciled in Spain is disingenuous, language that is far from being remotely rigorous, and honestly, it almost sounds like a joke.
I have barely modified anything that you have added in this article, don't worry and what you have added is fine by me, but obviously my rights to edit (in general) this article are intact. But yes, we can stop here. Venezia Friulano (talk) 20:13, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
Well, as i said Bennett is one of the big authorities on Trajan and is held in high regards (he is clearly using "Italian" for "Italic", which in English historiography has been common for a long time). Obviously no one can take away or limit your rights, i reverted you only because of a clear consensus among scholars and users here. Barjimoa (talk) 20:30, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply
If he is considered a great authority on Trajan, of course, it may not be for saying something like "Italian domiciled in Spain" but for the extensive contributions about his life and reign.
I apologize for the inflammatory language or the non-assumption of Neutrality. I consider the thread closed, and you can consider it a compromise. Venezia Friulano (talk) 20:53, 20 April 2023 (UTC)Reply

How to end the disruption of this article

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Furius (talk), Alex2006 (talk),User: Dimadick, continuing here the discussion above...I have restored information deleted by Venezia for months now (I believe that other user deleting information, 2A02:2E02:D90:1F00:C85:E65:F3CE:392B, is still Venezia). We already settled the debate over and over again, but the thing Venezia wants to remove (first from the body of the article, now from the intro) is always the same: the Italic lineage of Trajan, derived from the fact that his hometown of Italica in Spain was an Italic colony. Altough Venezia dislikes it, every biography on Trajan explicetely says it on page 1. I refuse to remove information just because one user dislikes it, first by claiming wrongly that Trajan was of Iberic lineage, and now convienently claiming that it has to be removed cause "it's not important" (when it evidently is, firstly because it is the first thing said by our sources and secondly because we have to say where Trajan's family came from). Can someone help me?Barjimoa (talk) 08:40, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

I do not deny that Trajan has Italic origins nor have I said that he is of Iberic origin. I have simply adapted the Lead to the basic rules of Wikipedia for the Lead. In addition, the Lead already specifies that Trajan was an Ulpia and of the Nerva-Antonina Dynasty. There is no need to be extremely specific about that in particular in the Lead, there are better places for it.
The Lead is a general summary of the article, the secondary, more specific and accessory information must go in the sections. Specifically, in the "Early life" section, secondary information is already perfectly collected, such as the birthplace of Trajan's father, his position as senator, what was the Ulpia branch and what city it originates from, the Italic (Tuder/Umbrian) lianeage of Trajan, that the city of Italica was an Italic settlement, etc.
Also, as it is a biography, the chronology is important to keep an order, and for this reason it is also recommended that the Trajan's birthplace go from the beginning of the Lead. Venezia Friulano (talk) 10:19, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
It's good we now agree on the substance. But if you want to argue that it should not be in the lead, then build a consensus here to remove that info from it. The onus is on you to make a change on the order and content of the intro. Personally I am against removing this information from the intro for the reasons I have already given. I also like more the current order. Barjimoa (talk) 09:38, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
There's not much debate really. There is a whole manual [4] on what a biographical Lead should be like.
The place of birth must go in the Lead's entry, and content such as specific details of his gens or about the origin of the city of Italica go against the summary nature of the Lead. For accessory information or to deepen there are the sections of the article. Venezia Friulano (talk) 09:44, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
You have just consolidated an Edit War with three consecutive reversals (3RR), and in order to avoid the rules of the Manual of Style being applied to the Lead Venezia Friulano (talk) 09:50, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
You are removing content and waging an edit war, certainly not me. I'm restoring the previous order and infos. Regarding the issue...given that Trajan was born in a province and in a town called Italica, it fits to mention that the lineage was Italic and not indigenous. See for example Cleopatra, where we mention she was born in Egypt, but that she was of Greek descent rather than indigenous and we briefly say what the Plometaic dynasty was. Regarding the order, the manual is respected, the first paragraph is usually a "who's who". It's from the second paragraph that we mention the biographical events in chronological order. See Napoleon, Julius Caesar, William Shakespeare etc. Barjimoa (talk) 09:54, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
The who's who of Trajan (aka Roman Emperor) is perfectly written in the first sentence of the Lead. The main reason the person is notable (key accomplishment, record, etc.) is after the birth and nationality. It's in the manual.
You are starting an Edit War because, for purely personal reasons and agenda, you want to specify that his "gen branch" is Italic and specifically Tuder (Todi) in the Italia region and that Italica was founded by Italics, that his father was a senator and from Hispania. Completely accessory information already collected in the Early Life section.
The lead section should summarise the life and works of the person with due weight. You are over-specifying his gens and family, when there is already a summary of it in the Lead. In addition, you are giving a weight that it does not have in the body of the article.
1- Name(s) and title(s), if any (see also Wikipedia:Naming conventions (royalty and nobility)). Handling of the subject's name is covered below in § First mention.
2- Dates of birth and death, if found in secondary sources (do not use primary sources for birth dates of living persons or other private details about them).
3- Context (location, nationality, etc.) for the activities that made the person notable.
4- One, or possibly more, noteworthy positions, activities, or roles that the person is mainly known for, avoiding subjective or contentious terms.
5- The main reason the person is notable (key accomplishment, record, etc.)Venezia Friulano (talk) 10:05, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Yeah, no, don't even try to reverse the situation. Everyone can see who has the agenda here. You originally tried to make Trajan of indigenous lineage, then to water down his Italic lineage, now to hide it. No way, I'm never going to allow it for the simple reason that the historical truth matters. I will check this article continuously and prevent it from happening. That information on Italica and his family in the intro is more than fine: it fits, it's clear, and it's concise.Barjimoa (talk) 10:25, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I have never attempted to assert that Trajan's surname or gens was indigenous. In addition, all the information about Trajan's gens, his branch and origin (city and region), as well as his parents (gens, occupation and origin) is perfectly written in the "Early life" section.
The Lead is a summary, and I have written you exactly what the style manual is according to the Wikipedia rules for the Lead of biographical people. Given your rocky attitude against the Manual of Style, and your willingness to pursue an Edit warring, few options remain with you. Venezia Friulano (talk) 10:38, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I'm not going to get into an Edit War with you, and I urge you to read the Wikipedia rules for the Lead well. Be reasonable and prepare with me a summary, using the Manual of Style of Wikipedia, that is good for both of us that does not include specific information (such as the origins of ancient colonies, the origin city of a gen branch, etc.) about something that does not have too much weight in the body of the article either. Venezia Friulano (talk) 10:49, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Not now, I'm talking of the attempt made months ago. Anyway, we made our cases, let's see what others think. Also, please don't accuse me of waging an edit war, you began it by removing that content and what I did was restoring it. Barjimoa (talk) 11:03, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
The examples of Cleopatra and Napoleon show that it is perfectly acceptable to mention descent in the lead. I support its inclusion there. Furius (talk) 11:37, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Read carefully. The issue is not whether or not descent is included, but if this descent should be very specific in the Lead or not. (The order of the paragraphs, according the Manual of Style, is also subject to debate). Venezia Friulano (talk) 11:44, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I said "in the lead. I support its inclusion there." Furius (talk) 11:50, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Everyone here agrees to include Trajan's descent in the Lead. Thats not the problem. Venezia Friulano (talk) 11:53, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
But in your version it is no longer stated that Trajan's family originally came from Italy. You expect a reader to potentially infer that from the reference to "gens Ulpia", but there's no reason why a general reader would infer that. I'd be happy for the details to go in a note, but the basic point ought to be present in the lead.
I have no comment on the ordering of elements so have not commented on that. Furius (talk) 11:58, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Compare the lead to Hadrian: He was born in Italica (close to modern Santiponce in Spain), a small Roman municipium of Hispania Baetica founded by Scipio as an Italic settlement; his family, the Aeli Hadriani, came from the town of Hadria. Something similar would be perfectly reasonable in this article too. Furius (talk) 12:00, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Well, both of these articles (Hadrian and Trajan) are edited by the same person who started this thread. Perhaps you have not taken the best example.
Gens branch and family (As a general concept) is not strictly the same, but look, Hadrian's Lead is at least better ordered (According to the Manual of Style) unlike Trajan's current mess. Venezia Friulano (talk) 12:08, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Just to be clear on the "edited by the same person", you removed the information regarding Italy on Hadrian's page too and I restored it there as well. But I don't want to argue over that, I recognize you a coherence in doing that if you do it for Trajan: the same reasoning should apply for both Trajan and Hadrian. But obviously, like Furius I believe that both are fine in mentioning the Italic lineage. Just to make my position on Hadrian's lead known as well. Barjimoa (talk) 12:10, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I honestly think that you are giving too much importance to the fact that "x" Roman's last name (or gentile nomem) is of Italic origin. It hardly adds anything and does not change the fact that Trajan is a native of Hispania, just like his parents. I understand your position and your personal situation, but Its better to put our Italian flag aside to write about this things.
There are more significant things than that to include in the Lead. In fact, if not for me, it wouldn't even have been mentioned that he was a member of the Nervo-Antonian dynasty. (Which ironically is about as Italic as one can say of Trajan) Venezia Friulano (talk) 12:21, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Venezia, please enough of this gaslighting, it's really difficult to discuss with you. You claim one thing and then deny it, you accuse others of doing what you are doing. We are not putting an Italian flag on Trajan, on the other hand your edits aim at removing what is not related to Spain concerning Trajan's roots. Absolutely pointless. He was born in Hispania, yes, the lead rightly says it, it's not like it's hidden, but we also rightly mention that he was born in an Italic settlement and that his family came from Umbria. That you think it's not important is irrelevant, our sources all stress it. Barjimoa (talk) 12:31, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
When Trajan was born Italica, the municipium was not a mere settlement for Italics, that it was at the time of its founding with Scipio. And his gens branch comes from Tuder, but it doesn't mean that all of his family or ancestors are Tuder as well.
Barjimoa, even in the Gladius article you tried to imply that it was of Roman (Italic) origin, erasing that it arose in Iberia by Celtiberians, your biased edits on Mussolini article are also very debatable, as well as the biased changes made by you in some Italian wars (Greek-Italian War, among others). Please, I know very well that you have the Tricolore next to the keyboard , you don't have to convince me otherwise.
That being said, no further discussion is necessary, the change has been made, and it more or less conforms to the Manual of Style I was referencing. Venezia Friulano (talk) 12:40, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Are you implying I am a fascist, like what? That is ridicolous. I literally wrote sections on war crimes committed by Mussolini and Hitler. On the gladius page I intervented there cause I saw your suspicious and (again) wrong edits. It's not my fault if you go around creating a mess on pages on Roman history. This gaslighting has to stop. Barjimoa (talk) 12:46, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Some of your edits in the Mussolini article consist of minimizing defeats, in others you erased that Italy, at that time, was a fascist regime, and in general you tend to edit with a clear agenda of sugarcoating Italy's fascist history. Your edits are public, mate.
I am Italian, I know exactly what the political situation in my country is like, and believe me, you neither surprise me nor deceive me. Ciao. Venezia Friulano (talk) 12:54, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
You are totally wrong, my edits on Mussolini concern mentions of the Roman empire in his article. For example I wrote that the fascist salute was a fascist invention and not an ancient roman thing. So what are you even talking about. Barjimoa (talk) 13:16, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
All edits are public. Let it be, but it is what it is. Venezia Friulano (talk) 13:25, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

No Venezia Friulano, it does not work like this. Stop disrupting the article. not only you have no consensus, you are even losing the argument above. Let the debate continue, so far only one user other than us had intervened and disagreed with your proposed changes. You can't force your view.Barjimoa (talk) 12:44, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

The other user agreed to give this article a similar content and structure to Hadrian's. And it's just what I've done, why are you doing Edit War again? Venezia Friulano (talk) 12:57, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
The other user agreed to use a similar estructure of Hadrian's article to this article.
  • Hadrian's Lead:
"Hadrian (/ˈheɪdriən/; Latin: Caesar Trajanus Hadrianus [ˈkae̯sar trajˈjaːnʊs (h)adriˈjaːnʊs]; 24 January 76 – 10 July 138) was Roman emperor from 117 to 138. He was born in Italica, close to modern Seville in Spain, a small Roman municipium of Hispania Baetica founded by Scipio as an Italic settlement; his branch of the Aelia gens, the Aeli Hadriani, came from the town of Hadria. Hadrian was a member of the Nerva–Antonine dynasty."
  • Trajan's Lead with my edit:
Trajan (/ˈtrən/ TRAY-jən; Latin: Caesar Nerva Traianus; 18 September 53 – c. 11 August 117) was Roman emperor from 98 to 117. Trajan was born in Italica, close to modern Seville in present-day Spain, a small Roman municipium of Hispania Baetica founded by Scipio as an Italic settlement; his branch of the Ulpia gens, the Ulpii Traiani, came from the town of Tuder. Trajan was a member of the Nerva–Antonine dynasty and his father, Marcus Ulpius Traianus, also natural from Italica, was a senator" Venezia Friulano (talk) 13:07, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
He did not. Furius (talk) made two points
1)he agreed with me and disagreed with you on Trajan's Italic lineage, referring to the way Hadrian's intro was worded in this context.
2)he said he has no preference regarding the order of the lead. Here he didn't pick a side.
Be honest. Barjimoa (talk) 13:16, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
This was the message of Furius: "Compare the lead to Hadrian: He was born in Italica (close to modern Santiponce in Spain), a small Roman municipium of Hispania Baetica founded by Scipio as an Italic settlement; his family, the Aeli Hadriani, came from the town of Hadria. Something similar would be perfectly reasonable in this article too"
It seems that you haven't read it, but we are maintaining the Italic lineage (brach of gens, city of origin of the branch, dynasty, Italica founded as Italic settlement by Scipio, etc) in the Lead using a structure similar to the Hadrian's Lead. (A Lead that It was even edited by you)
Please stop doing Edit War. Venezia Friulano (talk) 13:20, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Using the structure and content of Hadrian's Lead in Trajan's Lead (Keeping descent, branch gens and city of origin) is currently the only majority. Venezia Friulano (talk) 13:17, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Clearly you are not in good faith. He literally wrote: "I have no comment on the ordering of elements so have not commented on that". Everyone can read and see what he meant and what you decided he meant. And, in any case, you can't just reorder the whole lead in the middle of a discussion about it and accuse others of edit war.Barjimoa (talk) 13:41, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
You edited and are satisfied with the Lead of the Hadrian's article, and the Trajan's Lead is literally the same. The italic lineage is even as you want. What is your problem now? Venezia Friulano (talk) 13:46, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
We have taken all the italic lineage of Trajan and we have mentioned it in the Lead as you wanted. And the structure of the Lead is very similar to that of Hadrian, an article edited by you that you are satisfied with. Venezia Friulano (talk) 13:54, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I never said I wanted the ORDER of Hadrian's lead here. In fact I explicetely said I was against changing the oder. Also, you removed the reference to Tuder being in the Umbria region of Italy, which is important for identifying a small town, we are not talking about a well-known place. And "natural from Italica" is not english. So, once more, we have to restore it to to how it looked like before you ruined it.Barjimoa (talk) 13:58, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
So what you say is that you want to have different order criteria for the Lead for Hadrian and Trajan? What kind of joke is this? If you're fine with one, you're fine with another. Cherrpicking is invalid on Wikipedia, be coherent.
Also Umbria is mentioned, so what are you talking about? Venezia Friulano (talk) 14:03, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
You have reintroduced Umbria only after my comment. You think I can't see it? I have no words. At least you corrected the grammar. But I still don't like that the Nerva-Antonine dynasty, his adoptive family after 97-98, is mentioned in that way, at the beginning. As if he was a member of it since birth. Problematic.Barjimoa (talk) 14:11, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
My edit adding Umbria was made at 13:52 (UTC) while your message complaining that Umbria was not there is from 13:58 (UTC). Next time speak properly, I added it before your complaint.
I have eliminated the dynasty to leave it in another place farthest from birth (As you wanted). Venezia Friulano (talk) 14:18, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
The current form of the lead [5] seems fine to me; the order in which elements are mentioned is also unobjectionable.
I think it would be best to take a cool down period of 24 hours or so, in order to give other editors a chance to register their opinions. The talk page discussion is already very long! Furius (talk) 14:14, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
I also totally agree with that Lead. Thanks for making it clear. Venezia Friulano (talk) 14:22, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply
Got it. I still believe that the current second paragraph should be 1st or 3d, cause it's a paragraph on the the significance of Trajan, hence to me it looks better at the beginning or at the end, not in the middle of the bio, but, okay, let's see if others have something to say about it.Barjimoa (talk) 14:27, 6 July 2023 (UTC)Reply

Barbarian

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Whoever might have raised it, is "barbarian tribes" now an appropriate term to use? PatGallacher (talk) 20:24, 8 October 2023 (UTC)Reply

Since we don't seem to have a clear idea whom he fought specifically, I think it makes sense to keep it. Furius (talk) 22:05, 8 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
That isn't really the issue. PatGallacher (talk) 22:06, 8 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
So...looking at the biography of Bennet it says that Trajan took the title "Germanicus" in 97 for a victory over the Suebi and others, that's the success referred to in that passage, for this victory contributed to his adoption by Nerva at that time. I too have no problem with the term "barbarians", because that's a recurring term in ancient and modern historiography to group the different non-Roman peoples and tribes. However, here we can write "Germanic tribes", because these are the specific peoples mentioned in the context.Barjimoa (talk) 04:21, 9 October 2023 (UTC)Reply
No. "Barbarian" is highly inappropriate language to use in a non-citable context. This term has a strong historical link as a pejorative term and utilised as a rational to subjugate out-groups. EmMyNaTOR (talk) 08:08, 20 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

Semi-protected edit request on 20 December 2023

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Please edit page to replace BC/AD with BCE/CE. It is objectionable to use a religious tenor when it is widely accepted to use the secular variation in academia. In other words, BC/AD are antiquated terms. EmMyNaTOR (talk) 07:54, 20 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

  Not done for now: please establish a consensus for this alteration before using the {{Edit semi-protected}} template. Deltaspace42 (talkcontribs) 08:29, 20 December 2023 (UTC)Reply

Quinquennalia and Decennalia

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should be mentioned, dated, and sourced when possible. — LlywelynII 04:52, 19 January 2024 (UTC)Reply

Latest socks of James/Venezia

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I, User:Furius, User:Alessandro57 and many many others (the more you go back in time on this talk page the more users who reached the same conclusion you will find) already agreed, and looked carefully at the sources multiple times to make this decision, that the Italic lineage of Trajan (and of his hometown of, nomen omen, Italica) is 100% certain. All Trajan' biographies state this on the first pages of the biography of Trajan (we already listed them in previous discussions).


It is also been agreed that it's relevant for this to be mentioned in the intro like we do for the Greek lineage of Cleopatra (see above for the previous discussions).

Note that the ONLY ONE user who has relentlessly pushed against this fact over the years and tried to change it without basis is the permanent blocked user User:JamesOredan (who violated basically every rule of wikipedia) with a part of his hundreds of socks (Venezia Friulano, Aestatichs01, Bolnet, EvertonEast, several others, and many many IPs that have been rangeblocked for this article). He claims various weak reasons for it but the reality is that he and his socks just go around removing stuff about Italy or other countries (Portugal, Uk) without caring for sources and consensus (other users who dealt with this way of proceeding are User:LukeWiller and User:P Aculeius, and many others).

All this is because he is a strange suprematist obsessed with genetics and feels a rivarly with Italy, Portugal and Uk, so he goes around insulting Italian, Portuguese, Arab and British users, pushing Spain up to the extremes and putting Italy, Uk, Portugal down. I want to inform everyone that every time there is this weird proceeding involved, it's very likely him. Don't be afraid to revert and report him and have him blocked, even though he is a gaslighter and engages in accusation in a mirror.

Barjimoa (talk) 18:44, 18 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

  • Barjimoa, can you stop with the non-stop reverting? What good does it do? Report the sock, with some evidence, and revert them when it's done. Drmies (talk) 18:58, 18 March 2024 (UTC)Reply
    • User:Drmies, you are right but i am relly in pain in doing this for yeas. Because he has too many socks and works on so many pages at the same time and is a professional at insulting and mocking. A lot of damage has been done and has remained. Some of the socks he is currently using are Uniidosporasensio, Lucenselugo, Tyrefr, Aibelle, Flutoumb, and EvertonEast. But surely he has many more. I personally believe he has had thousands over the years, we catched less than 100.Barjimoa (talk) 19:05, 18 March 2024 (UTC)Reply

Military campaigns > Diaspora revolt, par. 1, 1st sentence

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I have made a small stylistic edit in order to add a time reference to the first sentence, so that a reader who turns immediately (as I did just now) to "Diaspora revolt" (fourth subsection of "Military campaigns") does not need to scroll up to find the period of time to which the opening words "Shortly afterward" referred. Emmstel (talk) 19:58, 7 September 2024 (UTC)Reply