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Funded Projects › H2020

RecRoad · From Aquileia to Singidunum (Belgrade), reconstructing the paths of Roman travelers

H2020Status: CLOSED1 February 201631 January 2018EU funding €185,076Call H2020-MSCA-IF-2014

The RecRoad project aims to reconstruct the Roman road going from Aquileia, in the north-east of Italy, to Singidunum, onthe Danube river. This was one of the main road axes of the Empire and it connected the Venetian area with the PannoniaSuperior and the Danubian limes: the road was longer than 450 miles, passing through the Alps, it ran along the river Sava,crossing its course several times. The road's general layout can be followed in the itinerary sources but an attempt toaccurately reconstruct the course of the road on the ground has never been tried before and may greatly improve ourknowledge of the evolution of the territories that it crossed over the time. After an in-depth study of the original itinerary of theroad, the project aims also at the analysis of the consequences of its construction on the landscape from different point ofview (culture, settlement dynamics, religion, trade, …), so that better comprehension of the territorial and culturalconnections, will be possible. To reach these goals, the project will consider and use all the sources and the newtechnologies avalaible to archaeologists, in a multi-disciplinary approach. All the collected and generated information will begeo-referenced and published in an online Atlas.The main output of the project will be an interactive atlas available online, where it will be possible to visualize thereconstructed route in its geographical context, the reliability degree of the individual segments and the sources that wereidentified with reference to the single stretch of the road to which they pertain. In addition, new strategies and initiatives forthe protection and knowledge dissemination will be developed. For the first time, all the sources today avalaible toarchaeologists will be used to identify the original track of a Roman road and to study the importance of the consequencesthat its presence had on the territory and on the way ancient people conceived the landscape where they lived.

Consortium · 1 organisation

coordinator

UNIVERSITE BORDEAUX MONTAIGNE

FR · €185,076

Research fields

View the official record on CORDIS →

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