Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Germania Superior and Germania Inferior in the 3rd century. The plan governing the development of the limes was relatively simple. From a strategic point of view, the Agri Decumates, or region between the Rhine and Danube, offers a bulge in the line between the Celts and the Germanics, which the Germanics had tried to exploit under Ariovistus ...

  2. Mar 14, 2024 · The Roman provinces of Germania Superior and Inferior formed a frontier zone of diverse topography and changing history that experienced several discrete phases of expansion, consolidation and withdrawal. They extended from the Saône and Rhône Valleys in eastern Gaul north along the Rhine to the North Sea. The reign of Augustus saw the ...

  3. People also ask

  4. May 5, 2015 · The English term ‘Roman Germany’ refers to both the two Roman provinces of Germania (respectively Inferior and Superior) and to the regions of modern Germany that were Romanized, i.e. the two provinces of Roman Germania, Raetia, and a small part of Noricum.

  5. Germanicus. Two years later, Tiberius succeeded Augustus and became emperor. General Germanicus (a son of Drusus) now commanded the army of Germania Inferior. In 14, 15, and 16, he invaded the country between the Rhine and Elbe again, and was able to defeat Arminius in battle.

  6. It lay north of Germania Superior; these two together made up Lesser Germania. The adjective Inferior refers to its downstream position. The army of Germania Inferior, typically shown on inscriptions as EX.GER.INF. (Exercitus Germaniae Inferioris), included several legions at various times: of these, Legions I Minervia and XXX Ulpia Victrix ...

  7. Other articles where Germania Inferior is discussed: Battle of the Teutoburg Forest: Context: …regions which the Romans called Germania Inferior and Germania Superior, respectively. In 12 bce Drusus took the army of Germania Superior on an expedition to crush the Sicambri, Frisii, and Chauci tribes to the north. He was able to force the tribes to surrender before year’s end, and some ...

  8. James and Krmnicek define the handbook’s conception of “Roman Germany” as the portions of the 1 st3 rd century AD provinces of Germania Inferior and Germania Superior that are in modern Germany.