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Antonine Itinerary

Imperial Roman register of roads and stations From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Antonine Itinerary
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The Antonine Itinerary (Latin: Itinerarium Antonini Augusti, "Itinerary of the Emperor Antoninus") is an itinerarium, a register of the stations and distances along various roads. Seemingly based on official documents, possibly in part from a survey carried out under Augustus, it describes the roads of the Roman Empire.[1] Owing to the scarcity of other extant records of this type, it is a valuable historical record.[2]

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Iter Britanniarum, displayed as a road map. The plotted routes and stations are approximations. The Antonine Wall and Hadrian's Wall are shown.
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Publication History

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Manuscripts

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RBME R II 18 f.67r The first page of the oldest manuscript preserving the Itinerarium.

Almost nothing is known of its author or the conditions of its compilation. Numerous manuscripts survive, the eight oldest dating to some point between the 7th to 10th centuries after the onset of the Carolingian Renaissance.[3] Despite the title seeming to ascribe the work to the patronage of the 2nd-century Antoninus Pius, all surviving editions seem to trace to an original towards the end of the reign of Diocletian in the early 4th century.[3] The most likely imperial patron—if the work had one—would have been Caracalla.[1]

More information Siglum, Library ...

Stemma

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Stemma codicum of the Antonine Itinerary.

There are many manuscripts preserving the textual tradition of the Antonine Itinerary. For their edition of 1848 Parthey and Pinder[13] used 21 and listed a further 17 derivatives, however Cuntz (1929)[14] focused his work on the critical edition to just 7 manuscripts: P, D, L, B, β, R and C. He considered manuscripts P and D to be the most reliable and upon which was based the text of the critical edition. Manuscript L was revised on at least 3 occasions by 3 different hands with each placing differently in the stemma; this was used as the basis for the critical text for sections missing from P and D. Despite being 600 years apart, B and β are considered sister manuscripts. R and C are sisters from the most recent recension used by Cuntz.

Of Cuntz' critical edition, only manuscripts L, B, β, R and C preserve the Iter Britanniarum.[7]

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Iter Britanniarum

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Combined data from the Peutinger Table and Antonine Itinerary recording the Roman roads network.

The British section is known as the Iter Britanniarum, and can be described as the 'road map' of Roman Britain. There are 15 such itineraries in the document applying to different geographic areas.

The itinerary measures distances in Roman miles, where 1,000 Roman paces equals one Roman mile. A Roman pace was two steps, left plus right, and was conventionally set at 5 Roman feet (0.296 m), resulting in a Roman mile of 1,479 metres (0.919 miles).

Examples

Below are the original Latin ablative forms for sites along route 13,[13] followed by a translation with a possible (but not necessarily authoritative) name for the modern sites.[15] A transcriber omitted an entry, so that the total number of paces did not equal the sum of paces between locations.

More information Latin ablative, Translated possible site name ...

Below are the original Latin names for sites along route 14,[18] followed by a translation with a possible (but not necessarily authoritative) name for the modern sites.[15]

More information Latin ablative, Translated possible site name ...

A confounding factor

De Situ Britanniae (made available c.1749, published 1757) was a forgery by Charles Bertram that provided much spurious information on Roman Britain, including "itineraries" that overlapped the legitimate Antonine Itineraries, sometimes with contradicting information. Its authenticity was not seriously challenged until 1845, and it was still cited as an authoritative source until the late nineteenth century. By then, its false data had infected almost every account of ancient British history, and had been adopted into the Ordnance Survey maps,[19] as General Roy and his successors believed it to be a legitimate source of information, on a par with the Antonine Itineraries. While the document is no longer cited since its authenticity became indefensible, its data has not been systematically removed from past and present works.

Some authors, such as Thomas Reynolds, without challenging the authenticity of the forgery, took care to note its discrepancies and challenge the quality of its information.[20][21] This was not always so, even after the forgery was debunked.

Gonzalo Arias (died 2008) proposed that some of the distance anomalies in the British section of the Antonine Itinerary resulted from the loss of Latin grammatical endings, as these had marked junctions heading towards places, as distinct from the places themselves.[22] However, Arias may not have taken account of earlier work indicating that distances were measured between the edges of administrative areas of named settlements as opposed to centre-to-centre, thereby explaining supposed distance shortfalls and providing additional useful data on the approximate sizes of such areas.[23]

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Hispania

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Main Roman roads in Hispania
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Roads listed on the Itinerary

There are 34 routes in the itinerary for the provinces of Hispania.

More information Route, Start ...

See also

References

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