Castra Buridava
Castrum · Stolniceni
Dava
Buridava (Burridava) was a Dacian town situated in Dacia, later Dacia Apulensis, now Romania, on the banks of the river Aluta, now Olt. Later a Roman fort (Buridava castra) was built there.
Buridava was the main economic centre of the Dacian tribe of the Buri. Together with the fortresses at Grădiștea and Tetoiu, it formed part of the defensive system protecting the southeastern approaches to the Dacian royal capital at Sarmizegetusa. The settlement is mentioned by Ptolemy as the home of the Buridavensioi.
The Romans built the Buridava castra at Stolniceni (7 km from Ocnița )
After the Roman conquest, Buridava developed into an important civilian and military centre. It lay approximately halfway between Pons Aluti (Ioneștii Govorii) and Castra Traiana (Sîmbotin) along the Roman road. During the Trajanic Dacian Wars, a detachment of the Cohors I Hispanorum veterana was stationed there, as recorded in "Hunt’s pridianum".
A large stone fort (approximately 50 × 60 m) was built south of the civilian settlement, most likely under Hadrian, and was occupied by units including the Cohors I milliaria Brittonum. Brick and tile stamps confirm the presence of legions from Moesia Inferior ( Legio I Italica, Legio V Macedonica, and Legio XI Claudia ) as well as auxiliary units such as the Cohors II Flavia Bessorum and Cohors IX Batavorum. The site served as a base during the preparations for Trajan’s second Dacian campaign in 105.
Buridava was the main economic centre of the Dacian tribe of the Buri. Together with the fortresses at Grădiștea and Tetoiu, it formed part of the defensive system protecting the southeastern approaches to the Dacian royal capital at Sarmizegetusa. The settlement is mentioned by Ptolemy as the home of the Buridavensioi.
The Romans built the Buridava castra at Stolniceni (7 km from Ocnița )
After the Roman conquest, Buridava developed into an important civilian and military centre. It lay approximately halfway between Pons Aluti (Ioneștii Govorii) and Castra Traiana (Sîmbotin) along the Roman road. During the Trajanic Dacian Wars, a detachment of the Cohors I Hispanorum veterana was stationed there, as recorded in "Hunt’s pridianum".
A large stone fort (approximately 50 × 60 m) was built south of the civilian settlement, most likely under Hadrian, and was occupied by units including the Cohors I milliaria Brittonum. Brick and tile stamps confirm the presence of legions from Moesia Inferior ( Legio I Italica, Legio V Macedonica, and Legio XI Claudia ) as well as auxiliary units such as the Cohors II Flavia Bessorum and Cohors IX Batavorum. The site served as a base during the preparations for Trajan’s second Dacian campaign in 105.
Excavations have revealed both the Dacian settlement and a Roman town measuring roughly 1 km in length and 300 m in width. The Roman structures were built using stone from the Govora-Buleta quarries and paved with terracotta. A large bath complex and the remains of a bronze statue of an emperor were identified but have not been fully excavated.
Pottery finds include both Dacian and Roman types spanning the 1st to the 4th centuries, indicating continuity of occupation by the population under Roman rule. Coins range from the reign of Caligula to Justinian I. A fragment of a vase bearing the inscription BUR has been interpreted as referring to the Buridavenses.
After the Roman withdrawal from Dacia in 271, the settlement continued to exist until the arrival of the Slavs and Avars.