Askeri Kimliğin İzinde: Eumeneia’da Yapılar, Birlikler ve... Search of Military Identity: Structures, Troops and Soldiers in Eumeneia


Ünal E.

A. Tuba ÖKSE’ye Armağan Kızılırmak’tan Fırat ve Dicle’ye: Kültürlerin ve Uygarlıkların İzinde, Atilla ENGİN - Ayşegül AYKURT Ali Umut TÜRKCAN - Thomas ZIMMERMANN Deniz YAŞİN - Süheyla GEDİK ZIMMERMANN Özlem EKİNBAŞ CAN - Şeyma ÇİFTÇİ Şakir CAN - Engin KEKEÇ, Editör, bilgin , Ankara, ss.826-836, 2025

  • Yayın Türü: Kitapta Bölüm / Araştırma Kitabı
  • Basım Tarihi: 2025
  • Yayınevi: bilgin
  • Basıldığı Şehir: Ankara
  • Sayfa Sayıları: ss.826-836
  • Editörler: Atilla ENGİN - Ayşegül AYKURT Ali Umut TÜRKCAN - Thomas ZIMMERMANN Deniz YAŞİN - Süheyla GEDİK ZIMMERMANN Özlem EKİNBAŞ CAN - Şeyma ÇİFTÇİ Şakir CAN - Engin KEKEÇ, Editör
  • Kocaeli Üniversitesi Adresli: Evet

Özet

Eumeneia was founded as a military colony by the Pergamene Kingdom to counter the Galatian

threat during the Hellenistic period. It became a garrison city of increasing military and strategic


importance during the Roman Imperial period. Its military character can be traced from the mid-

2nd century BCE to the mid-3rd century CE through archaeological and epigraphic evidence.


Maintaining its military function into the Byzantine period, the city remained a key part of

regional defence strategies until the Seljuk raids. Eumeneia’s geographical location made it

not only a military base but also a logistical centre securing trade routes. The city’s military

structures—including the Hellenistic walls on Sarıbaba Hill, the Roman castrum, and the

Byzantine bandon—reflect the diversity of military architecture over time. Epigraphic evidence

indicates that units such as Legio XII Fulminata, Ala I Bosporanorum, and Cohors I Raetorum

Equitana were stationed in Eumeneia. This study examines the military structures, stationed

units, and epigraphic records of soldiers in the city, analysing Eumeneia’s military identity

and its impact on the social and economic structure. Additionally, it evaluates the influence of

military personnel on local society during the Roman period, the interactions between civil and

military life, and the city’s cosmopolitan nature.