Oasis Forts of Legio III Augusta on the Routes to the Fezzan
- 1 November 1954
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Papers of the British School at Rome
- Vol. 22, 56-68
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s006824620000653x
Abstract
The two well-preserved Roman fortresses to be described in this paper have been known for many years. They were first brought to European notice by the British-sponsored geographical expeditions of the nineteenth century, when Tripoli was the spring-board for repeated attempts to find a route into Central Africa. Although important discoveries have been made in one of these forts (Bu Ngem) in more recent years, no detailed ground-plans have previously been published.The following notes and illustrations are primarily intended to fill this lacuna in the documentation of the African limes; but it is hoped that they may also serve to increase our knowledge of early third-century trends in Roman military architecture. The European frontiers of the Roman Empire have yielded, and are still yielding, numerous examples of first- and second-century forts, and equally numerous examples of the forts erected during the later-third and early-fourth centuries, when barbarian invasion threatened the whole Roman world.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- The Roman Fort at BrancasterThe Antiquaries Journal, 1936