Map of the Roman Empire - Moesia
Moesia
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Ancient Moesia A region in the Balkans along the south bank of the Danube River. Augustus took over the area in 29 B.C. in order to secure the empire up to the Danube frontier. Later Moesia became a Roman Province under the reign of Tiberius.
Moesia. A country of Europe, called by the Greeks Mysia. It was bounded on the south by Thrace and Macedonia, on the west by Illyricum and Pannonia, on the north by the Danube, and on the east by the Pontus Euxinus, thus corresponding roughly to the present Servia and Bulgaria. This country was subdued in the reign of Augustus (B.C. 29), and was made a Roman province at the commencement of the reign of Tiberius. It was afterwards formed into two provinces, called Moesia Superior and Moesia Inferior, the former being the western and the latter the eastern half of the country. When Aurelian surrendered Dacia to the barbarians and removed the inhabitants of that province to the south of the Danube, the middle part of Moesia was called Dacia Aureliani. - Harry Thurston Peck. Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. New York. Harper and Brothers. 1898.
Moesia (Greek: Μοισία, Μυσία, Latin)[1] Moesiarum was an ancient region and Roman province situated in the Balkans, along the south bank of the Danube River. It included territories of modern-day Northern Republic of Macedonia,[2] Southern Serbia (Upper Moesia), Northern Bulgaria, South-Eastern Romania, Southern Moldova, and Budjak (Lower Moesia). In ancient geographical sources, Moesia was bounded to the south by the Balkans (Haemus) and �ar mountain (Scardus, Scordus, Scodrus) mountains, to the west by the Drina river (Drinus), on the north by the Danube and on the east by the Euxine (Black Sea). The region was inhabited chiefly by Thracian, and Illyrian peoples. The region took its name from the Moesi, a Thraco-Dacian tribe that lived there before the Roman conquest 75 BC-c. 29 BC and formally became a Roman province of that name some years later (by 6 AD). Moesia was re-organized personally by the Emperor Domitian in 87 AD into two provinces: Moesia Superior - Upper Moesia, (meaning up river) and Moesia Inferior - Lower Moesia, (from the Danube river's mouth and then upstream) during relief efforts for the province after the Dacian cross-Danube raids of 86 and early 87 AD). In 75 BC, C. Scribonius Curio, proconsul of Macedonia, took an army as far as the Danube and gained a victory over the inhabitants, who were finally subdued by M. Licinius Crassus, grandson of the triumvir and later also proconsul of Macedonia during the reign of Augustus c. 29 BC. The region, however, was not organized as a province until the last years of Augustus's reign; in 6 AD, mention is made of its governor, Caecina Severus (Cassius Dio lv. 29). Originally one province under an imperial consular legate (who probably also had control of Achaea and Macedonia), it was divided by Domitian into Upper (Superior) and Lower (Inferior, also called Ripa Thracia) Moesia, the western and eastern portions respectively, divided from each other by the river Cebrus (Ciabrus; modern Cibritza or Zibru). Some, however, place the boundary farther west. Each was governed by an imperial consular legate and a procurator. After the abandonment of Dacia to the Goths by Aurelian (270�275) and the transference of the Roman citizens from the former province to the south of the Danube, the central portion of Moesia took the name of Dacia Aureliani (later divided into Dacia ripensis and interior). The district called Dardania (in Upper Moesia), was formed into a special province by Diocletian, with the capital at Naissus or Nissa (modern Ni�, the birthplace of Constantine I in 272. - WikipediaMoesia MOE�SIA
MOE�SIA a Roman province in Europe, was bounded on the S. by M. Haemus, which
separated it from Thrace, and by M. Orbelus and Scordus, which separated it from
Macedonia, on the W. by M. Scordus and the rivers Drinus and Savus, which
separated it from Illyricum and Pannonia, on the N. by the Danube, which
separated it from Dacia, and on the E. by the Pontus Euxinus, thus corresponding
to the present Servia and Bulgaria. The Greeks called it Mysia (??s?a), and the
inhabitants Mysians (??s??), and sometimes European Mysia (??s?a ? ?? ????p?, D.
C. 49.36; Appian, App. Ill. 6), to distinguish it from Mysia in Asia.
The original inhabitants of Moesia were, according to Strabo, a tribe of
Thracians, and were the ancestors of the Mysians of Asia (vii. p. 295). Of the
early history of the country, little or nothing is known. In B.C. 277, a large
body of Gaulish invaders entered Moesia, after the defeat and death of their
leader Brennus, and settled there under the name of the Scordisci. The Romans
first entered Moesia in B.C. 75, when C. Scribonius Curio, proconsul of
Macedonia, penetrated as far as the Danube, and gained a victory over the
Moesians. (S. Ruf. Brev. 7; Jornand. de Regn. Succ. 50; Eutrop. 6.2.) But the
permanent subjugation of Moesia was probably effected by M.Licinius Crassus, the
grandson of the triumvir, who was proconsul of Macedonia in B.C. 29. (Liv. Ep.
134, 135; D. C. 51.25-27; Flor. 4.12, 15.) This may be inferred from the
statement of Dio Cassius (53.7), who represents Augustus two years afterwards
(B.C. 27) speaking of the subjugation of Gallia, Mysia, and Aegypt. Further, in
A.D. 6, Dio Cassius mentions the governor of Mysia (55.29), and in A.D. 14
Tacitus speaks of the legatus Moesiae (Ann. 1.79); so that there can be no doubt
that it was reduced into the form of a province in the reign of Augustus, and
that the statement of Appian is incorrect, that it did not become a Roman
province till the reign of Tiberius. (Ill. 30.) In the reign of Tiberius, Moesia
was laid waste by the Dacians and Sarmatians, being then without a garrison,
contrary to the usual Roman practice, for a legion was generally stationed
there. (Suet. Tib. 41, Vesp. 6; Tac. Ann. 16.6.) As a frontier province of the
empire. it was strengthened by a line of stations and fortresses along the south
bank of the Danube. A Roman wall was built from Axiopolis to Tomi, as a defence
against the Sarmatians and Scythians, who inhabited the delta of the Danube.
Moesia was originally only one province, but was divided into two provinces,
called Moesia Superior and Inferior, probably at the commencement of Trajan's
reign. (Marquardt, in Becker's Romisch. Alterth. vol. iii. pt. i. p. 106.) Each
province was governed by a consular legatus, and was divided into smaller
districts (regiones et vici). Moesia Superior was the western, and Moesia
Inferior the eastern half of the country; they were separated from each other by
the river Cebrus or Ciabrus, a tributary of the Danube. (Ptol. 3.9, 10.) They
contained several Roman colonies, of which two, Ratiaria and Oescus, were made
colonies by Trajan, and Viminacium by Gordian III. (Marquardt, l.c.) The
conquest of Dacia, by Trajan, removed the frontiers of the empire farther north,
beyond the Danube. The emperor Hadrian visited Moesia, as we are informed by his
medals, in his general progress through the empire, and games in his honour were
celebrated at Pincum. In A.D. 250 the Goths invaded Moesia. Decius, who was then
emperor, marched against them, but was defeated and killed in a battle with them
in 251. What the valour of Decius could not effect, his successor, Trebonianus
Gallus, obtained by bribery; and the Goths withdrew to the Dniester. When
Aurelian gave up Dacia to the Goths, and withdrew his troops and part of the
inhabitants to the south side of the river, he formed a settlement in the heart
of Moesia, which was named from him Dacia Aureliani. [DACIA Vol. I. p. 745.] In
395 the Ostrogoths, being hard pressed by the Huns, requested permission of the
Romans to pass the Danube, and settle in Moesia. The request was acceded to by
Valens, who was then emperor, and a large number took advantage of the
privilege. They soon, however, quarrelled with the Roman authorities, and killed
Valens, who marched to oppose them. The Goths, who settled in Moesia, are
sometimes called Moeso-Goths, and it was for their use that Ulphilas translated
the Scriptures into Gothic about the middle of the fourth century. In the
seventh century the Sclavonians entered Moesia, and the Bulgarians about the
same time, and founded the kingdoms of Bulgaria and Servia.
Moesia was occupied by various populations; the following are enumerated by
Ptolemy and Pliny (Ptol. 3.9; Plin. Nat. 3.26): the Dardani, Celegeri, Triballi,
Timachi, Moesi, Thraces, Scythae, Tricornesii, Pincensii, Troglodytes, and
Peucini, to which may be added the Scordisci. (Liv. 40.57.) The relative
situations of these people were somewhat as follows: the Dardani, said to be a
colony from Dardania in Asia, dwelt on the borders of Macedonia. The Triballi
dwelt near the river Ciabrus; the [2.368] Timachi by the river Timachus. The
Triconesii, who derived their name from Tricornum, were on the confines of
Dalmatia. The Peucini inhabited the island of Pence, at the mouth of the Danube.
The Thraces were near their own country; the Scordisci, between the Dardani and
Dalmatia. The Moesi, or Mysi, proper, inhabited the heart of the country to
which they gave their name, on the banks of the river Ciabrus.
- Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Geography (1854) William Smith, LLD, Ed.
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