Dei Norvegesi prestarono servizio nelle legioni Romane?
E’ la domanda che è stata posta recentemente da un giornale online di Oslo, il BITSOFNEWS, in seguito al ritrovamento di vari oggetti appartenenti a soldati sepolti con armature, arredi funebri e persino oggetti di uso comune fra i legionari romani in una zona del nord-Europa, molto lontana da Roma. Varie le ipotesi ed i commenti di esperti docenti di storia antica, in servizio presso la locale università di Oslo.
L’articolo di Gjermund E. Jansen riporta dettagliatamente la storia dei vari ritrovamenti fatti in epoche diverse, arricchita dal contributo di questi docenti desiderosi di esprimere dei giudizi obiettivi, e non delle valutazioni approssimative. Tali giudizi, in effetti, vengono a smentire fondamentalmente molte delle convinzioni del passato in base alle quali i Norvegesi non potevano avere avuto contatti diretti con il mondo romano. Ed invece proprio questi reperti dimostrano esattamente il contrario. Interessante e abbastanza provocatorio il commento del prof. Svein Gulli, del Cultural Historical Museum, il quale afferma:
nbsp;
“It is a historical fact that Vikings served as mercenaries in the service of the Byzantine emperor, why then couldn’t they have served in the Roman legions?”
Cioè :”E’ un dato storico che i Vikinghi prestarono servizio come mercenari per conto dell’imperatore di Bisanzio; perché mai non avrebbero potuto prestare servizio nelle legioni romane?”
nbsp;
Il grande libro della storia, come si vede, non è mai definitivo, ma vi sono continuamente aggiornamenti e nuovi capitoli che si aggiungono anno per anno.
Ed ecco qui di seguito l’articolo originale in lingua inglese.
nbsp;
nbsp;nbsp;Monday, 27 November 2006 Written by Gjermund E. Jansen |
|
Archaeological findings have strengthened notions amongst scholars that quite a few Norwegians, from the farthermost north of Europe, in all likelihood served as soldiers in the Roman legions. Ancient weaponry, cups and coins all points towards a more extensive cultural exchange between Norway/Scandinavia and the Roman Empire than previously assumed, an assumption, (article in Norwegian only), Professor Heid Gjøstein Resi at the Cultural Historical Museum, at the University of Oslo also seems to agree with. Yes, I believe Norwegians served in Roman legions,” he says, and continues;”We have been able to confirm that artifacts found in old graves in Norway, which at first were believed to have originated elsewhere, do indeed have their origins from the Roman Empire.” In 1895, during the excavation of the grave of a Norwegian warlord, dating back to 200 A.D, buried near the little village of Avaldsnes on the west coast of Norway, scientists found a sword with a silver ornamented scabbard, a silver ornamented shield, bracelets and four gold rings, artifacts and weaponry that indicates very well that this warlord might have served in the Roman legions, according to Professor Lotte Hedeager at the Institute of archeology, Oslo University. It is a well known fact that people from so called barbaric tribes like the German tribes up north, were recruited into the Roman legions and that some of them even ended up as Generals and leaders of the Roman legions themselves.
“Warriors that chose to return to Norway, after 10-15 years in service, brought back not only Roman artifacts and coins but some even brought back artifacts typical for a man serving in the legions,” says Laszlo Berczelli, a retired scholar from the Cultural Historical Museum. One artifact typical for soldiers in service of the Roman army was vessels made of bronze for drinking and eating, an artifact found in many graves excavated in the eastern parts of Norway. On an ending note, the scientist Svein Gulli, at the Cultural Historical Museum, asks somewhat rhetorically; |
nbsp;
nbsp;
Ultimi interventi
-
Le stagioni nella antica Pomp…
Pubblicato il 30 set 2008 -
Cesare in mostra a Roma nel C…
Pubblicato il 27 set 2008 -
Tre seminari su temi e proble…
Pubblicato il 25 set 2008
Taras66










Anteprima del commento