Una nueva ciudad romana en El Forau de la Tuta, Artieda, Zaragoza: estudio epigráfico y búsqueda toponímica
NAVARRO CABALLERO, M.; ASENSIO ESTEBAN, J. A.; ÍÑIGUEZ BERROZPE, L.; ANGÁS PAJAS, J.; URIBE AGUDO, P.; MAÑAS ROMERO, I.; MAGALLÓN BOTAYA, M. A.; ARIÑO GIL, E. (2024). Una nueva ciudad romana en El Forau de la Tuta, Artieda, Zaragoza: estudio epigráfico y búsqueda toponímica, Revue des Etudes Anciennes, T. 126, 2024, nº 1, pp. 45-89, Universitè Bordeaux Montaigne.
A new Roman town has been discovered at El Forau de la Tuta, Artieda, province of Zaragoza. Investigations carried out by a joint Spanish/French team have brought to light monumental remains from the Imperial period, as well as Latin epitaphs, the study of which is the main focus of this work. The fact that a large proportion of the individuals attested bore Aquitanian-Vasconic names would suggest that the city’s pre-Roman population spoke this language. Based on this, the article analyses all the sources that mention Roman cities in the territory of the Vascones, which could provide clues as to the name of this new town. But apart from the hypothesis about its name, the existence of this new city leads us to rethink Roman urban planning in the region of the Pyrenees region, where archaeological discoveries have been very significant in recent years
A new Roman town has been discovered at El Forau de la Tuta, Artieda, province of Zaragoza. Investigations carried out by a joint Spanish/French team have brought to light monumental remains from the Imperial period, as well as Latin epitaphs, the study of which is the main focus of this work. The fact that a large proportion of the individuals attested bore Aquitanian-Vasconic names would suggest that the city’s pre-Roman population spoke this language. Based on this, the article analyses all the sources that mention Roman cities in the territory of the Vascones, which could provide clues as to the name of this new town. But apart from the hypothesis about its name, the existence of this new city leads us to rethink Roman urban planning in the region of the Pyrenees region, where archaeological discoveries have been very significant in recent years