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The item to Laminio, alio itinere Cæsarea Augusta, as it appears in the original document, or Antonine Itinerary A-31, according to the nomenclature adopted by Saavedra to classify the Roman roads of Hispania that appear in that document,[1][2][3] is a communication route of Ancient Rome through the current Iberian Peninsula. Of all the Hispanic Itineraries, this is one of the most difficult to reconstruct since most of its points of passage have not yet been fully established, among them Laminio, the city of origin, and there are notable discrepancies within the scientific community.
Itinerary of Antoninus A-31 Item to Laminium, alio itinere Cæsarea Augusta | |
---|---|
Route information | |
History | Roman Empire |
Component highways | A-31 |
Tourist routes | Caput fluminis Anae Libisosa Parietinis Saltigi Ad Putea Valebonga Urbiaca Albonica Agiria Carae Sermone |
History
editDespite the difficulty of knowing its route in situ, it is one of the routes that best illustrates the character and nature of the Itinerary of Antonine. At first it was thought that the roads contained in this document were unitary routes that directly linked point A to point B, known by their names, in the manner of today's roads. The fact that the only well known section of the A-31 is the one that uses a small part of the Via Augusta, one of the best known of ancient Hispania, while the rest of the road network used is an unknown quantity, leads us to think that, in reality, the routes of Antonine are routes in which several of those unitary roads are used.
Route
editOnly the section of this route that uses the Via Augusta between Libisosa (today Lezuza) and Saltigi (today Chinchilla de Monte-Aragón), in the current province of Albacete, reaches full agreement among all the authors. Between the two, it has been proposed the location of the mansio known as Parietinis, near Paredazos Viejos, in the site known as Ventorro de la Vereda, located in the vicinity of the road and at the approximate distance between Chinchilla and Lezuza, suggested by the itinerary.[1][4] Its origin is unknown since there are severe discrepancies about the location of the municipium of Laminio, the starting point of the itinerary. If we stick to the distances expressed in the document, 21 m. p. (approx. 31 km.), it is completely impossible for it to be outside the province of Albacete, where various locations have been suggested in the municipalities of Villarrobledo, Munera, El Bonillo or Ossa de Montiel. However, most of the scientific community insists on locating Laminio in Alhambra (Ciudad Real) at about 70 km. or even in Daimiel at about 100 km.
Nor is there full agreement on the direction of this route from Chinchilla. From there, some authors take it through the provinces of Cuenca and Teruel, up to Zaragoza, while others ignore the province of La Mancha and divert the route through Valencia.
A final difficulty is the distance traveled to its destination (Zaragoza), although there is no doubt about the location of this city. Whichever route is chosen, it always falls short, so it has been assumed that the route would end at a junction with another Itinerary of Antonine, another route, an administrative border, etc.
Stage | Distance (in roman miles) | Current position | Comments |
---|---|---|---|
Laminio | 0 | unknown | Location very disputed. It is speculated that there are several sites in the provinces of Albacete and Ciudad Real. |
Caput fluminis Anae | 14 Libisosa and 10 Mentesa | unknown | Literally translated as 'towards the source of the Guadiana'. Possibly located somewhere in the northwest of the province of Albacete.[5] |
Libisosa | 13 | Lezuza | Always known.[5] |
Parietinis | 21 | Ventorro de la Vereda, in Paerazos Viejos (Albacete) | Correctly located by Saavedra himself in 1862[1] and archaeologically confirmed by Sillieres.[4] |
Saltigi | 15 | Chinchilla de Monte-Aragón | It has always been known. The current name of Chinchilla derives from the pre-Roman Saltigi, through Latin, Arabic, Mozarabic and Castilian.[6] |
Ad putea | 32 | unknown | Several locations have been suggested such as Pozoamargo. |
Valebonga | 40 | unknown | Several locations have been suggested, including, due to phonetic similarity, Valdeganga, pedanía de Valdetórtola and the municipality of Valdeganga (Albacete). |
Urbiaca | 20 | unknown | Several locations have been suggested, including the Roman villa of Noheda. |
Albonica | 25 | unknown | Several locations have been suggested. |
Agiria | 5 | unknown | Several locations have been suggested. |
Carae | 10 | unknown | Several locations have been suggested. By homophony it could be Cariñena. |
Sermone | 20 | unknown | Several locations have been suggested. |
Caesaraugusta | 30 | Zaragoza | Always known. |
See also
editBibliography
edit- Arias, Gonzalo (2004). Repertorio de Caminos de la Hispania Romana (in Spanish) (2nd ed.). Ronda: Pórtico librerías.
- PALOMERO PLAZA, S. (1987). Las vías romanas en la provincia de Cuenca (in Spanish). Cuenca: Diputación de Cuenca.
- Plaza, Simón (2011). "De El Bonillo a Murcia y 'De Norte a Sur: llamado camino de la Calzada'. Una solución al Itinerario Antonino 31". El Nuevo Miliario. 12: 27–53.
- Roldán Hervás, José Manuel (1973). Itineraria Hispana. Fuentes antiguas para el estudio de las vías romanas en la península ibérica (in Spanish). Valladolid: Universidad de Valladolid.
- Saavedra, Eduardo (1862). Discursos leídos ante la Real Academia de la Historia en la recepción pública de D. Eduardo Saavedra (in Spanish). Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia.
References
edit- ^ a b c Saavedra, Eduardo (1862). Discursos leídos ante la Real Academia de la Historia en la recepción pública de D. Eduardo Saavedra (in Spanish). Madrid: Real Academia de la Historia.
- ^ Arias Bonet, Gonzalo (1987). Repertorio de caminos de la Hispania romana (in Spanish). La Línea de la Concepción.
- ^ Roldán Hervás, José María (1973). Itineraria Hispana. Fuentes antiguas para el estudio de las vías romanas en la península ibérica (in Spanish). Valladolid: Universidad de Valladolid.
- ^ a b SILLIÈRES, P. (1977). "Le 'camino de Aníbal'. Itinéraire des Gobelets de Vicarello, de Castulo à Saetabis". Mélanges de la Casa Velázquez. 13: 31–83. doi:10.3406/casa.1977.2243.
- ^ a b PLAZA SIMÓN, A. (2011). "De El Bonillo a Murcia y 'De. Norte a Sur: llamado camino de la Calzada'. Una solución al Itinerario Antonino 31. Fuentes". El Nuevo Miliario (in Spanish). 12: 27–53.
- ^ POCKLINGTON, R. (1987). "La etimología de los topónimos 'Chinchilla' y 'Nubla'". Estudios románicos (in Spanish). 5: 1137–1151.
External links
edit- Atlas of the Roman Empire with center in Toledo (in Spanish)