The quadriburgium(?) fortification from Veterani Cave in the Danube Gorge Cover Image

Fortificatia quadriburgium (?) de la pestera Veterani din Clisura Dunării
The quadriburgium(?) fortification from Veterani Cave in the Danube Gorge

Author(s): Călin Timoc
Subject(s): History, Archaeology, Military history, Ancient World
Published by: MUZEUL NAȚIONAL DE ISTORIE A ROMÂNIEI
Keywords: defending walls; fortress-cave; quadriburgium; Danube Cauldrons; Late Roman Period;

Summary/Abstract: The Veterani Cave is one of the most well-known natural caves on the territory of Romania, nowadays being often visited by tourists. It is not only an impressive natural monument but also a multi-layered archaeological site with a very rich history. The fortification of the grotto is certain for the Middle Ages and the modern era. The traces of the Roman era are less clear, with specialists hesitating between recognizing it as a fishing settlement that at some point, in the late Roman era, could have been fortified, or classifying it as a sacred cave or even a mithraeum. As it is expected, its strategic position in the area of the Danube Cauldrons strait made this unusual place to be included in the UNESCO list of the Danube Limes of the Roman Empire. In the following text, we try to decipher the character of the Roman ruins at Veterani Cave (Peskabara) corroborating all the sources at our disposal: archaeological, epigraphical, archival and cartographic informations. We consider that in front of the cave there existed, starting from the end of the 3rd century AD, a small fort (similar to a quadriburgium) with a small port, also defended by walls made from stone and bricks.

  • Issue Year: XXIX/2022
  • Issue No: 2
  • Page Range: 615-630
  • Page Count: 16
  • Language: Romanian