BASTARNAE
Map
showing Roman Dacia and surrounding peoples in 125 AD
The
Bastarnae (Latin variants: Bastarni, or Basternae) were an ancient
people who between 200 BC and 300 AD inhabited the region between
the Carpathian Mountains and the river Dnieper, to the north and
east of ancient Dacia. The Peucini, described as a branch of the
Bastarnae by Greco-Roman writers, occupied the region north of the
Danube Delta.
The
ethno-linguistic affiliation of the Bastarnae was probably Celtic,
which is supported by the earliest historians. However, later historical
sources imply a Germanic or Scytho-Sarmatian origin. Often they
are associated with the Germans, or the peoples "between the
Celts and the Germans". The most likely scenario is that they
were originally a Celtic tribe, originally resident in the lower
Vistula River valley. Around 200 BC, these tribes migrated, possibly
accompanied by some Germanic elements, south-eastwards into the
North Pontic region. Some elements appear to have become assimilated,
to some extent, by the surrounding Sarmatians by the 3rd century.
Although
largely sedentary, some elements may have adopted a semi-nomadic
lifestyle. So far, no archaeological sites have been conclusively
attributed to the Bastarnae. The archaeological horizons most often
associated by scholars with the Bastarnae are the Zarubintsy and
Poienesti-Lukashevka cultures.
The
Bastarnae first came into conflict with the Romans during the 1st
century BC when, in alliance with Dacians and Sarmatians, they unsuccessfully
resisted Roman expansion into Moesia and Pannonia. Later, they appear
to have maintained friendly relations with the Roman Empire during
the first two centuries AD. This changed c. 180, when the Bastarnae
are recorded as participants in an invasion of Roman territory,
once again in alliance with Sarmatian and Dacian elements. In the
mid-3rd century, the Bastarnae were part of a Gothic-led grand coalition
of lower Danube tribes that repeatedly invaded the Balkan provinces
of the Roman Empire.
Many
Bastarnae were resettled within the Roman Empire in the late 3rd
century.
Ancient
sources :
According to Polybius (200 - 118 BC) :
"A
mission from the Dardanians now arrived, telling of the Bastarnae,
their numbers, the huge size and the valour of their warriors, and
also pointing out that Perseus and the Galatians were in league
with this tribe. They said they were much more afraid of him than
of the Bastarnae, and they begged for aid."
According
to Livy (64 BC - 17 AD) :
"The
way to the Hadriatic and to Italy lay through the Scordisci; that
was the only practicable route for an army, and the Scordisci were
expected to grant a passage to the Bastarnae without any difficulty,
for neither in speech nor habits were they dissimilar, and it was
hoped that they would unite forces with them when they saw that
they were going to secure the plunder of a very wealthy nation."
According
to Strabo (64 BC - 24 AD) :
"However,
it is clear from the "climata" and the parallel distances
that if one travels longitudinally towards the east, one encounters
the regions that are about the Borysthenes and that are to the north
of the Pontus; but what is beyond Germany and what beyond the countries
which are next after Germany — whether one should say the
Bastarnae, as most writers suspect, or say that others lie in between,
either the Iazyges, or the Roxolani, or certain other of the wagon-dwellers
— it is not easy to say; nor yet whether they extend as far
as the ocean along its entire length, or whether any part is uninhabitable
by reason of the cold or other cause, or whether even a different
race of people, succeeding the Germans, is situated between the
sea and the eastern Germans. And this same ignorance prevails also
in regard to the rest of the peoples that come next in order on
the north; for I know neither the Bastarnae, nor the Sauromatae,
nor, in a word, any of the peoples who dwell above the Pontus, nor
how far distant they are from the Atlantic Sea, nor whether their
countries border upon it."
According
to Plutarch (46 - 120 AD) :
"He
also secretly stirred up the Gauls settled along the Danube, who
are called Basternae, an equestrian host and warlike; and he invited
the Illyrians, through Genthius their king, to take part with him
in the war. And a report prevailed that the Barbarians had been
hired by him to pass through lower Gaul, along the coast of the
Adriatic, and make an incursion into Italy."
According
to Tacitus (56 - 120 AD) :
"As
to the tribes of the Peucini, Veneti, and Fenni I am in doubt whether
I should class them with the Germans or the Sarmatæ, although
indeed the Peucini called by some Bastarnæ, are like Germans
in their language, mode of life, and in the permanence of their
settlements. They all live in filth and sloth, and by the intermarriages
of the chiefs they are becoming in some degree debased into a resemblance
to the Sarmatæ."
According
to Cassius Dio (155 - 235 AD) :
"During
the same period in which these events occurred Marcus Crassus was
sent into Macedonia and Greece and carried on war with the Dacians
and Bastarnae. I have already stated who the former were and why
they had become hostile; the Bastarnae, on the other hand, who are
properly classed as Scythians, had at this time crossed the Ister
and subdued the part of Moesia opposite them, and afterwards subdued
the Triballi who adjoin this district and the Dardani who inhabit
the Triballian country."
According
to Zosismus (490s - 510 AD) :
"He
likewise left in Thrace the Bastarnae, a Scythian people, who submitted
to him, giving them land to inhabit there; on which account they
observed the Roman laws and customs."
Etymology
:
The origin of the tribal name is uncertain. It is not even clear
whether it was an exonym (a name ascribed to them by outsiders)
or an endonym (a name by which the Bastarnae described themselves).
A related question is whether the groups denoted "Bastarnae"
by the Romans considered themselves a distinct ethnic group at all
(endonym) or whether it was a generic exonym used by the Greco-Romans
to denote a disparate group of tribes of the Carpathian region that
could not be classified as Dacians or Sarmatians.
One
possible derivation is from the proto-Germanic word *bastjan (from
Proto-Indo-European root *bhas-), meaning "binding" or
"tie". In this case, Bastarnae may have had the original
meaning of a coalition or bund of tribes.
It
is possible that the Roman term basterna, denoting a type of wagon
or litter, is derived from the name of this people (or, if it is
an exonym, that the name of the people is derived from it) who were
known, like many Germanic tribes, to travel with a wagon train for
their families. [failed verification]
It
has also been suggested that the name is linked with the Germanic
word bastard, meaning illegitimate or mongrel, but Roger Batty considers
this derivation unlikely. If the name is an endonym, then this derivation
is unlikely, as most endonyms have flattering meanings (e.g. "brave",
"strong", "noble").
Trubacev
proposes a derivation from Old Persian, Avestan bast- "bound,
tied; slave" (cf. Ossetic bætten "bind", bast
"bound") and Iranian *arna- "offspring", equating
it with the "slave Sporoi" mentioned by Nonnus and Cosmas,
where the Sporoi are the people Procopius mentions as the ancestors
of the Slavs.
Territory
:
Location
of Blastarni and the Alpes Bastarnicae north of Roman Dacia, as
depicted on Tabula Peutingeriana
The original homeland of the Bastarnae remains uncertain. Babes
and Shchukin argue in favour of an origin in eastern Pomerania on
the Baltic coast of today's north-west Poland, on the grounds of
correspondences in archaeological material, e.g. a Pomeranian-style
fibula found in a Poienesti site in Moldavia, although Batty considers
the evidence insufficient. Babes identifies the Sidoni, a branch
of the Bastarnae which Strabo places north of the Danube delta with
the Sidini located by Ptolemy in Pomerania.
Batty
argues that Greco-Roman sources of the 1st century AD locate the
Bastarnae homeland on the northern side of the Northern Carpathian
mountain range, encompassing south-east Poland and south-west Ukraine
(i.e. the region traditionally known as Galicia). Pliny locates
the Bastarnae between the Suebi and the Dacians (contermini Dacis).
The Peutinger Map (produced ca. 400 AD, but including material from
as early as the 1st century) shows the Bastarnae (mis-spelt Blastarni)
north of the Carpathian mountains and appears to name the Galician
Carpathians as the Alpes Bastarnicae.
From
Galicia, the Bastarnae expanded into the Moldavia and Bessarabia
regions, reaching the Danube Delta. Strabo describes the Bastarnae
as inhabiting the territory "between the Ister (the Danube)
and the Borysthenes (the Dnieper)". He identifies three sub-tribes
of the Bastarnae: the Atmoni, Sidoni and Peucini. The latter derived
their name from Peuce, a large island in the Danube Delta which
they had colonised. The 2nd-century geographer Ptolemy states that
the Carpiani or Carpi (believed to have occupied Moldavia) separated
the Peucini from the other Bastarnae "above Dacia" (i.e.
north of Dacia).
It
thus appears that the Bastarnae were settled in a vast arc stretching
around the northern and eastern flanks of the Carpathians from south-east
Poland to the Danube Delta. The larger group inhabited the northern
and eastern slopes of the Carpathians and the region between the
Prut and Dnieper rivers (modern-day Moldova/western Ukraine), while
a separate group (the Peucini, Sidoni and Atmoni) dwelt in and north
of the Danube Delta region.
Ethno-linguistic
affiliation :
Scholars hold divergent theories about the ethnicity of the Bastarnae.
One view, following what appears to be the most authoritative view
among earliest scholars, is that they spoke a Celtic language. However
others hold that they were Scythian/Germanic, or mixed Germanic/Sarmatian.
A fringe theory is that they were Proto-Slavic. Shchukin argues
that the ethnicity of the Bastarnae was unique and rather than trying
to label the Bastanae as Celtic, Germanic or Sarmatian, it should
be accepted that the "Basternae were the Basternae".
Batty
argues that assigning an "ethnicity" to the Bastarnae
is meaningless; as in the context of the Iron Age Pontic-Danubian
region, with its multiple overlapping peoples and languages, ethnicity
was a very fluid concept: it could and did change rapidly and frequently,
according to socio-political vicissitudes. This was especially true
of the Bastarnae, who are attested over a relatively vast area.
Celtic
:
A leading reason to consider the Bastarnae as Celtic is that the
regions they are documented to have occupied (the northern and eastern
slopes of the Carpathians) overlapped to a great extent with the
locations of Celtic tribes attested in the northern Carpathians.
(The modern name of this region, Galicia, is generally regarded
as having a later origin, in either a Slavic or Turkic language.
However, some scholars have instead suggested that the name Galicia
may derive from its former Celtic inhabitants the Taurisci, Osi,
Cotini and Anartes of Slovakia and northern Romania and the Britogalli
of the Danube Delta region.) In addition, archaeological cultures
which some scholars have linked to the Bastarnae (Poienesti-Lukashevka
and Zarubintsy) display pronounced Celtic affinities. Finally, the
arrival of the Bastarnae in the Pontic-Danubian region, which can
be dated to 233–216 BC according to two ancient sources, coincides
with the latter phase of Celtic migration into the region (400–200
BC).
The
earliest historians give a Celtic or Gallic origin to the Bastarnae.
Roman historian Livy, writing in c. 10 AD, attests that the Bastarnae
spoke Celtic. Relating the Bastarnic invasion of the Balkans of
179 BC (see Allies of Philip of Macedon below), he describes them
then as "they were not very different in either language or
manners" to the Celtic tribe of the Scordisci, a tribe of Pannonia.
The Scordisci are described as Celtic by Strabo (although he adds
that they had mingled with Illyrians and Thracians). The Greek historian
Plutarch inform us that the Roman consul Hostilius "secretly
stirred up the Gauls settled along the Danube, who are called Basternae".
However,
a Celtic identity for the Bastarnae is apparently contradicted by
Polybius (writing ca. 150 BC), who was an actual contemporary of
the events described, unlike Livy, who was writing some 200 years
later. Polybius clearly distinguishes the Bastarnae from the "Galatae"
(i.e. Celts): "An embassy from the Dardani arrived [at the
Roman Senate], talking of the Bastarnae, their huge numbers, the
strength and valour of their warriors, and also reporting that Perseus
[king of Macedon] and the Galatae were in league with this tribe."
In addition, inscription AE (1905) 14, recording a campaign on the
Hungarian Plain by the Augustan-era general Marcus Vinucius (10
BC or 8 BC), also appears to distinguish the Bastarnae from neighbouring
Celtic tribes: "Marcus Vinucius... governor of Illyricum, the
first [Roman general] to advance across the river Danube, defeated
in battle and routed an army of Dacians and Basternae, and subjugated
the Cotini, Osi,...[missing tribal name] and Anartii to the power
of the emperor Augustus and of the people of Rome."
The
three names of Bastarnae leaders found in ancient sources are of
Celtic origin: Cotto, Clondicus and Teutagonus.
Germanic :
The expansion of the Germanic tribes 750 BCE – 1 CE
(after the Penguin Atlas of World History 1988)
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Settlements
before 750 BCE |
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New settlements by 500 BCE |
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New
settlements by 250 BCE |
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New
settlements by 1 CE |
Greco-Roman
geographers of the 1st century AD are unanimous and specific that
the Bastarnae were Germanic in language and culture. The Greek geographer
Strabo (writing c. 5–20 AD) says the Bastarnae are "of
Germanic stock". The Roman geographer Pliny the Elder (c. 77
AD), classifies the Bastarnae and Peucini as being one of the five
main subdivisions of Germanic peoples, the other subdivisions being
three West Germanic groups, the Inguaeones, Istuaeones and Hermiones,
and the East Germanic Vandili.
The
Roman historian Tacitus (c. 100 AD) describes the Bastarnae as Germans
with substantial Sarmatian influence, but moves on to state: "The
Peucini, however, who are sometimes called Bastarnae, are like the
Germans in their language, way of life and types of dwelling."
Scytho-Sarmatian
:
Strabo includes the Roxolani, generally considered by scholars to
have been a Sarmatian tribe, in a list of Bastarnae subgroups. However,
this may simply be an error due to the close proximity of the two
peoples north of the Danube Delta. In the 3rd century, the Greek
historian Dio Cassius states that the "Bastarnae are properly
classed as Scythians" and "members of the Scythian race".
Likewise, the 6th-century historian Zosimus, reporting events around
280 AD, refers to "the Bastarnae, a Scythian people".
However, it appears that these late Greco-Roman chroniclers used
the term "Scythian" more often in a geographical sense
(for inhabitants of the region they called Scythia, i.e. the Pontic
region north of the Danube) rather than in an ethnic one (for members
of the Scythian people, steppe nomads of Iranic origin, related
to the Sarmatians, who had supplanted the Scythians' dominance of
the steppes in the period BC). For example, Zosimus also routinely
refers to the Goths, who were undoubtedly Germanic-speakers, as
"Scythians".
It
is possible that some Bastarnae may have been assimilated by the
surrounding (and possibly dominant) Sarmatians, perhaps adopting
their tongue (which belonged to the Iranian group of Indo-European
languages) and customs. Thus Tacitus' comment that "mixed marriages
are giving [the Bastarnae] to some extent the vile appearance of
the Sarmatians". On the other hand, the Bastarnae maintained
a separate name until ca. 300 AD, probably implying retention of
their distinctive ethno-linguistic heritage up to that time. It
seems likely, on balance, that the core population of Bastarnae
had always been, and continued to be, Germanic in language and culture.
Material
culture :
Attempt
to reconstruct Bastarnae costumes at the Archaeological Museum of
Kraków. Such clothing and weapons were commonplace among
peoples on the Roman Empire's borders.
Archaeological
cultures in the early Roman period, c. 100 AD
According to Malcolm Todd, traditional archaeology has not been
able to construct a typology of Bastarnae material culture, and
thus to ascribe particular archaeological sites to the Bastarnae.
A complicating factor is that the regions where Bastarnae are attested
contained a patchwork of peoples and cultures (Sarmatians, Scythians,
Dacians, Thracians, Celts, Germans and others), some sedentary,
some nomadic. In any event, post-1960s archaeological theory has
questioned the validity of equating material "cultures",
as defined by archaeologists, with distinct ethnic groups. In this
view, it is impossible to attribute a "culture" to a particular
ethnic group: it is likely that the material cultures discerned
in the region belonged to several, if not all, of the groups inhabiting
it. These cultures probably represent relatively large-scale socio-economic
interactions between disparate communities of the broad region,
possibly including mutually antagonistic groups.
It
is not even certain whether the Bastarnae were sedentary, nomadic
or semi-nomadic. Tacitus' statement that they were "German
in their way of life and types of dwelling" implies a sedentary
bias, but their close relations with the Sarmatians, who were nomadic,
may indicate a more nomadic lifestyle for some Bastarnae, as does
their attested wide geographical range. If the Bastarnae were nomadic,
then the sedentary "cultures" identified by archaeologists
in their lebensraum would not represent them. Nomadic peoples generally
leave scant traces, due to the impermanent materials and foundations
used in the construction of their dwellings.
Scholars
have identified two closely related sedentary "cultures"
as possible candidates to represent the Bastarnae (among other peoples)
as their locations broadly correspond to where ancient sources placed
the Basternae: the Zarubintsy culture lying in the forest-steppe
zone in northern Ukraine and southern Belarus, and the Poienesti-Lukashevka
culture (Lucaseuca) in northern Moldavia. These cultures were characterised
by agriculture, documented by numerous finds of sickles. Dwellings
were either of surface or semi-subterranean types, with posts supporting
the walls, a hearth in the middle and large conical pits located
nearby. Some sites were defended by ditches and banks, structures
thought to have been built to defend against nomadic tribes from
the steppe. Inhabitants practiced cremation. Cremated remains were
either placed in large, hand-made ceramic urns, or were placed in
a large pit and surrounded by food and ornaments such as spiral
bracelets and Middle to Late La Tène-type fibulae (attesting
the continuing strength of Celtic influence in this region).
A
major problem with associating the Poienesti-Lukashevka and Zarubintsy
cultures with the Bastarnae is that both cultures had disappeared
by the early 1st century AD, while the Bastarnae continue to be
attested in those regions throughout the Roman Principate. Another
issue is that the Poienesti-Lukashevka culture has also been attributed
to the Costoboci, a people considered ethnically Dacian by mainstream
scholarship, who inhabited northern Moldavia, according to Ptolemy
(ca. 140 AD). Indeed, Mircea Babes and Silvia Theodor, the two Romanian
archaeologists who identified Lukashevka as Bastarnic, nevertheless
insisted that the majority of the population in the Lukashevka sphere
(in northern Moldavia) was "Geto-Dacian". A further problem
is that neither of these cultures were present in the Danube Delta
region, where a major concentration of Bastarnae are attested by
the ancient sources.
Starting
in about 200 AD, the Chernyakhov culture became established in the
modern-day western Ukraine and Moldova region inhabited by the Bastarnae.
The culture is characterised by a high degree of sophistication
in the production of metal and ceramic artefacts, as well as of
uniformity over a vast area. Although this culture has conventionally
been identified with the migration of the Gothic ethnos into the
region from the northwest, Todd argues that its most important origin
is Scytho-Sarmatian. Although the Goths certainly contributed to
it, so probably did other peoples of the region such as the Dacians,
proto-Slavs, Carpi and possibly the Bastarnae.
Relations
with Rome :
Roman Republican era (to 30 BC) :
Allies of Philip of Macedon (179 – 8 BC) :
Silver
tetradrachm of Philip V of Macedon
The Bastarnae first appear in the historical record in 179 BC, when
they crossed the Danube in a massive force. They did so at the invitation
of their long-time ally, King Philip V of Macedon, a direct descendant
of Antigonus, one of the Diadochi, the generals of Alexander the
Great who had shared his empire after his death in 323 BC. The Macedonian
king had suffered a disastrous defeat at the hands of the Romans
in the Second Macedonian War (200–197 BC), which had reduced
him from a powerful Hellenistic monarch to the status of a petty
client-king with a much-reduced territory and a tiny army. After
nearly 20 years of slavish adherence to the Roman Senate's dictats,
Philip had been goaded by the incessant and devastating raiding
of the Dardani, a warlike Thraco-Illyrian tribe on his northern
border, which his treaty-limited army was too small to counter effectively.
Counting on the Bastarnae, with whom he had forged friendly relations,
he plotted a strategy to deal with the Dardani and then to regain
his lost territories in Greece and his political independence. First,
he would unleash the Bastarnae against the Dardani. After the latter
had been crushed, Philip planned to settle Bastarnae families in
Dardania (southern Kosovo/Skopje region) to ensure that the region
was permanently subdued. In a second phase, Philip aimed to launch
the Bastarnae on an invasion of Italy via the Adriatic coast. Although
he was aware that the Bastarnae were likely to be defeated, Philip
hoped that the Romans would be distracted long enough to allow him
to reoccupy his former possessions in Greece.
However,
Philip, now 60 years of age, died before the Bastarnae could arrive.
The Bastarnae host was still en route through Thrace, where it became
embroiled in hostilities with the locals, who had not provided them
with sufficient food at affordable prices as they marched through.
Probably in the vicinity of Philippopolis (modern Plovdiv, Bulgaria),
the Bastarnae broke out of their marching columns and pillaged the
land far and wide. The terrified local Thracians took refuge with
their families and animal herds on the slopes of Mons Donuca (Mount
Musala), the highest mountain in Thrace. A large force of Bastarnae
chased them up the mountain, but were driven back and scattered
by a massive hailstorm. Then the Thracians ambushed them, turning
their descent into a panic-stricken rout. Back at their wagon fort
in the plain, around half of the demoralised Bastarnae decided to
return home, leaving c. 30,000 to press on to Macedonia.
Philip's
son and successor Perseus, while protesting his loyalty to Rome,
deployed his Bastarnae guests in winter quarters in a valley in
Dardania, presumably as a prelude to a campaign against the Dardani
the following summer. However, in the depths of winter their camp
was attacked by the Dardani. The Bastarnae easily beat off the attackers,
chased them back to their chief town and besieged them, but they
were surprised in the rear by a second force of Dardani, which had
approached their camp stealthily by mountain paths, and proceeded
to storm and ransack it. Having lost their entire baggage and supplies,
the Bastarnae were obliged to withdraw from Dardania and to return
home. Most perished as they crossed the frozen Danube on foot, only
for the ice to give way. Despite the failure of Philip's Bastarnae
strategy, the suspicion aroused by these events in the Roman Senate,
which had been warned by the Dardani of the Bastarnae invasion,
ensured the demise of Macedonia as an independent state. Rome declared
war on Perseus in 171 BC and after the Macedonian army was crushed
at the Battle of Pydna (168 BC), Macedonia was split up into four
Roman puppet-cantons (167 BC). Twenty-one years later, these were
in turn abolished and annexed to the Roman Republic as the province
of Macedonia (146 BC).
Allies
of Getan high king Burebista (62 BC) :
Map
of Scythia Minor (Dobruja), showing the Greek coastal cities of
Histria, Tomis, Callatis and Dionysopolis (Istria, Constanta, Mangalia
and Balchik)
Coin
issued by the Greek coastal city of Histria (Sinoe)
The Bastarnae first came into direct conflict with Rome as a result
of expansion into the lower Danube region by the proconsuls (governors)
of Macedonia in 75–72 BC. Gaius Scribonius Curio (proconsul
75–73 BC) campaigned successfully against the Dardani and
the Moesi, becoming the first Roman general to reach the Danube
with his army. His successor, Marcus Licinius Lucullus (brother
of the famous Lucius Lucullus), campaigned against the Thracian
Bessi tribe and the Moesi, ravaging the whole of Moesia, the region
between the Haemus (Balkan) mountain range and the Danube. In 72
BC, his troops occupied the Greek coastal cities of Scythia Minor
(modern Dobruja region, Romania/Bulgaria), which had sided with
Rome's Hellenistic arch-enemy, King Mithridates VI of Pontus, in
the Third Mithridatic War (73–63 BC).
The
presence of Roman forces in the Danube Delta was seen as a major
threat by all the neighbouring transdanubian peoples: the Peucini
Bastarnae, the Sarmatians and, most importantly, by Burebista (ruled
82–44 BC), king of the Getae. The Getae occupied the region
today called Wallachia as well as Scythia Minor and were either
a Dacian- or Thracian- speaking people. Burebista had unified the
Getae tribes into a single kingdom, for which the Greek cities were
vital trade outlets. In addition, he had established his hegemony
over neighbouring Sarmatian and Bastarnae tribes. At its peak, the
Getae kingdom reportedly was able to muster 200,000 warriors. Burebista
led his transdanubian coalition in a struggle against Roman encroachment,
conducting many raids against Roman allies in Moesia and Thrace,
penetrating as far as Macedonia and Illyria.
The
coalition's main chance came in 62 BC, when the Greek cities rebelled
against Roman rule. In 61 BC, the notoriously oppressive and militarily
incompetent proconsul of Macedonia, Gaius Antonius, nicknamed Hybrida
("The Monster"), an uncle of the famous Mark Antony, led
an army against the Greek cities. As his army approached Histria,
Antonius detached his entire mounted force from the marching column
and led it away on a lengthy excursion, leaving his infantry without
cavalry cover, a tactic he had already used with disastrous results
against the Dardani. Dio implies that he did so out of cowardice,
in order to avoid the imminent clash with the opposition, but it
is more likely that he was pursuing a large enemy cavalry force,
probably Sarmatians. A Bastarnae host, which had crossed the Danube
to assist the Histrians, promptly attacked, surrounded and massacred
the Roman infantry, capturing several of their vexilla (military
standards). This battle resulted in the collapse of the Roman position
on the lower Danube. Burebista apparently annexed the Greek cities
(55–48 BC). At the same time, the subjugated "allied"
tribes of Moesia and Thrace evidently repudiated their treaties
with Rome, as they had to be reconquered by Augustus in 29–8
BC (see below).
In
44 BC, Roman dictator-for-life Julius Caesar planned to lead a major
campaign to crush Burebista and his allies once and for all, but
he was assassinated before it could start. However, the campaign
was made redundant by Burebista's overthrow and death in the same
year, after which his Getae empire fragmented into four, later five,
independent petty kingdoms. These were militarily far weaker, as
Strabo assessed their combined military potential at just 40,000
armed men, and were often involved in internecine warfare. The Geto-Dacians
did not again become a threat to Roman hegemony in the lower Danube
until the rise of Decebal 130 years later (86 AD).
Roman
Principate (30 BC – 284 AD) :
Augustan era (30 BC – 14 AD) :
Statue
of Augustus in the garb of Roman imperator (military supreme commander).
By the end of his sole rule (14 AD), Augustus had expanded the empire
to the Danube, which was to remain its central/eastern European
border for its entire history (except for the occupation of Dacia
105–275).
Once he had established himself as sole ruler of the Roman state
in 30 BC, Caesar's grand-nephew and adopted son Augustus inaugurated
a strategy of advancing the empire's south-eastern European border
to the line of the Danube from the Alps, the Dinaric Alps and Macedonia.
The primary objective was to increase strategic depth between the
border and Italy and also to provide a major fluvial supply route
between the Roman armies in the region.
On
the lower Danube, which was given priority over the upper Danube,
this required the annexation of Moesia. The Romans' target was thus
the tribes which inhabited Moesia, namely (from west to east) the
Triballi, Moesi and those Getae who dwelt south of the Danube. The
Bastarnae were also a target because they had recently subjugated
the Triballi, whose territory lay on the southern bank of the Danube
between the tributary rivers Utus (Vit) and Ciabrus (Tsibritsa),
with their chief town at Oescus (Gigen, Bulgaria). In addition,
Augustus wanted to avenge the defeat of Gaius Antonius at Histria
32 years before and to recover the lost military standards. These
were held in a powerful fortress called Genucla (Isaccea, near modern
Tulcea, Romania, in the Danube Delta region), controlled by Zyraxes,
the local Getan king. The man selected for the task was Marcus Licinius
Crassus, grandson of Crassus the triumvir and an experienced general
at 33 years of age, who was appointed proconsul of Macedonia in
29 BC.
The
Bastarnae provided the casus belli by crossing the Haemus and attacking
the Dentheletae, a Thracian tribe who were Roman allies. Crassus
marched to the Dentheletae's assistance, but the Bastarnae host
hastily withdrew over the Haemus at his approach. Crassus followed
them closely into Moesia but they would not be drawn into battle,
withdrawing beyond the Tsibritsa. Crassus now turned his attention
to the Moesi, his prime target. After a successful campaign which
resulted in the submission of a substantial section of the Moesi,
Crassus again sought out the Bastarnae. Discovering their location
from some peace envoys they had sent to him, he lured them into
battle near the Tsibritsa by a stratagem. Hiding his main body of
troops in a wood, he stationed as bait a smaller vanguard in open
ground before the wood.
As
expected, the Bastarnae attacked the vanguard in force, only to
find themselves entangled in the full-scale pitched battle with
the Romans that they had tried to avoid. The Bastarnae tried to
retreat into the forest but were hampered by the wagon train carrying
their women and children, as these could not move through the trees.
Trapped into fighting to save their families, the Bastarnae were
routed. Crassus personally killed their king, Deldo, in combat,
a feat which qualified him for Rome's highest military honour, spolia
opima, but Augustus refused to award it on a technicality. Thousands
of fleeing Bastarnae perished, many asphyxiated in nearby woods
by encircling fires set by the Romans, others drowned trying to
swim across the Danube. Nevertheless, a substantial force dug themselves
into a powerful hillfort. Crassus laid siege to fort, but had to
enlist the assistance of Rholes, a Getan petty king, to dislodge
them, for which service Rholes was granted the title of socius et
amicus populi Romani ("ally and friend of the Roman people").
The
following year (28 BC), Crassus marched on Genucla. Zyraxes escaped
with his treasure and fled over the Danube into Scythia to seek
aid from the Bastarnae. Before he was able to bring reinforcements,
Genucla fell to a combined land and fluvial assault by the Romans.
The strategic result of Crassus' campaigns was the permanent annexation
of Moesia by Rome.
About
a decade later, in 10 BC, the Bastarnae again clashed with Rome
during Augustus' conquest of Pannonia (the bellum Pannonicum 14–9
BC). Inscription AE (1905) 14 records a campaign on the Hungarian
Plain by the Augustan-era general Marcus Vinucius :
Marcus
Vinucius...[patronymic], Consul [in 19 BC]...[various official titles],
governor of Illyricum, the first [Roman general] to advance across
the river Danube, defeated in battle and routed an army of Dacians
and Basternae, and subjugated the Cotini, Osi,...[missing tribal
name] and Anartii to the power of the emperor Augustus and of the
people of Rome.
Most
likely, the Bastarnae, in alliance with Dacians, were attempting
to assist the hard-pressed Illyrian/Celtic tribes of Pannonia in
their resistance to Rome.
1st
and 2nd centuries :
War
scene of the Tropaeum Traiani (c. 109 AD): a Roman legionary fighting
with a Dacian warrior, while a Germanic warrior (Bastarnae?), who
has a suede knot, is wounded on the ground.
It appears that in the final years of Augustus' rule, the Bastarnae
made their peace with Rome. The Res Gestae Divi Augusti ("Acts
of the divine Augustus", 14 AD), an inscription commissioned
by Augustus to list his achievements, states that he received an
embassy from the Bastarnae seeking a treaty of friendship. It appears
that a treaty was concluded and apparently proved remarkably effective,
as no hostilities with the Bastarnae are recorded in surviving ancient
sources until c. 175, some 160 years after Augustus' inscription
was carved. But surviving evidence for the history of this period
is so thin that it cannot be excluded that the Bastarnae clashed
with Rome during it. The Bastarnae may have been involved in the
Dacian Wars of Domitian (86–88) and Trajan (101–102
and 105–106), since these took place in the lower Danube region
and it is known that both sides were supported by neighbouring indigenous
tribes.[original research?]
In
the late 2nd century, the Historia Augusta mentions that in the
rule of Marcus Aurelius (161–180), an alliance of lower Danube
tribes including the Bastarnae, the Sarmatian Roxolani and the Costoboci
took advantage of the emperor's difficulties on the upper Danube
(the Marcomannic Wars) to invade Roman territory.
3rd
century :
During the late 2nd century, the main ethnic change in the northern
Black Sea region was the immigration, from the Vistula valley in
the North, of the Goths and accompanying Germanic tribes such as
the Taifali and the Hasdingi, a branch of the Vandal people. This
migration was part of a series of major population movements in
the European barbaricum (the Roman term for regions outside their
empire). The Goths appear to have established a loose political
hegemony over the existing tribes in the region.
Under
the leadership of the Goths, a series of major invasions of the
Roman empire were launched by a grand coalition of lower Danubian
tribes from c. 238 onwards. The participation of the Bastarnae in
these is likely but largely unspecified, due to Zosimus' and other
chroniclers' tendency to lump all these tribes under the general
term "Scythians" – meaning all the inhabitants of
Scythia, rather than the specific Iranic-speaking people called
the Scythians. Thus, in 250–251, the Bastarnae were probably
involved in the Gothic and Sarmatian invasions which culminated
in the Roman defeat at the Battle of Abrittus and the slaying of
Emperor Decius (251). This disaster was the start of the Third Century
Crisis of the Roman Empire, a period of military and economic chaos.
At this critical moment, the Roman army was crippled by the outbreak
of a second smallpox pandemic, the plague of Cyprian (251–70).
The effects are described by Zosimus as even worse than the earlier
Antonine plague (166–180), which probably killed 15–30%
of the empire's inhabitants.
Taking
advantage of Roman military disarray, a vast number of barbarian
peoples overran much of the empire. The Sarmato-Gothic alliance
of the lower Danube carried out major invasions of the Balkans region
in 252, and in the periods 253–258 and 260–268. The
Peucini Bastarnae are specifically mentioned in the 267/268 invasion,
when the coalition built a fleet in the estuary of the river Tyras
(Dniester). The Peucini Bastarnae would have been critical to this
venture since, as coastal and delta dwellers, they would have had
seafaring experience that the nomadic Sarmatians and Goths lacked.
The barbarians sailed along the Black Sea coast to Tomis in Moesia
Inferior, which they tried to take by assault without success. They
then attacked the provincial capital Marcianopolis (Devnya, Bulgaria),
also in vain. Sailing on through the Bosporus, the expedition laid
siege to Thessalonica in Macedonia. Driven off by Roman forces,
the coalition host moved overland into Thracia, where finally it
was crushed by Emperor Claudius II (r. 268–270) at Naissus
(269).
Claudius
II was the first of a sequence of military emperors (the so-called
"Illyrian emperors" from their main ethnic origin) who
restored order in the empire in the late 3rd century. These emperors
followed a policy of large-scale resettlement within the empire
of defeated barbarian tribes, granting them land in return for an
obligation of military service much heavier than the usual conscription
quota. The policy had the triple benefit, from the Roman point of
view, of weakening the hostile tribe, repopulating the plague-ravaged
frontier provinces (bringing their abandoned fields back into cultivation)
and providing a pool of first-rate recruits for the army. It could
also be popular with the barbarian prisoners, who were often delighted
by the prospect of a land grant within the empire. In the 4th century,
such communities were known as laeti.
The
emperor Probus (r. 276–282) is recorded as resettling 100,000
Bastarnae in Moesia, in addition to other peoples, including Goths,
Gepids and Vandals. The Bastarnae are reported to have honoured
their oath of allegiance to the emperor, while the other resettled
peoples mutinied while Probus was distracted by usurpation attempts
and ravaged the Danubian provinces far and wide. A further massive
transfer of Bastarnae was carried out by Emperor Diocletian (ruled
284–305) after he and his colleague Galerius defeated a coalition
of Bastarnae and Carpi in 299.
Later
Roman empire (305 onwards) :
The remaining transdanubian Bastarnae disappear into historical
obscurity in the late empire. Neither of the main ancient sources
for this period, Ammianus Marcellinus and Zosimus, mention the Bastarnae
in their accounts of the 4th century, possibly implying the loss
of their separate identity, presumably assimilated by the regional
hegemons, the Goths. Such assimilation would have been facilitated
if, as is possible, the Bastarnae spoke an East Germanic language
closely related to Gothic. If the Bastarnae remained an identifiable
group, it is highly likely that they participated in the vast Gothic-led
migration, driven by Hunnic pressure, that was admitted into Moesia
by Emperor Valens in 376 and eventually defeated and killed Valens
at Adrianople in 378. Although Ammianus refers to the migrants collectively
as "Goths", he states that, in addition, "Taifali
and other tribes" were involved.
However,
after a gap of 150 years, there is a final mention of Bastarnae
in the mid-5th century. In 451, the Hunnic leader Attila invaded
Gaul with a large army which was ultimately routed at the Battle
of Châlons by a Roman-led coalition under the general Aetius.
Attila's host, according to Jordanes, included contingents from
the "innumerable tribes that had been brought under his sway".
This included the Bastarnae, according to the Gallic nobleman Sidonius
Apollinaris. However, E.A. Thompson argues that Sidonius' mention
of Bastarnae at Chalons is probably false: his purpose was to write
a panegyric and not a history, and Sidonius added some spurious
names to the list of real participants (e.g. Burgundians, Sciri
and Franks) for dramatic effect.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Bastarnae