Ratiaria[2] (or: Ratsaria, Raetiaria, Retiaria, Reciaria, Razaria; Bulgarian: Рациария; Greek: Ραζαρία μητρόπολις;) was a city founded by the Moesians, a Daco-Thracian tribe, in the 4th century BC,[citation needed] along the river Danube. In Roman times it was named Colonia Ulpia Traiana Ratiaria.
It is located 2 km west of the present village of Archar in Vidin Province, northwestern Bulgaria and 3 km east of the present Balta Neagră Natural Reserve in southern Romania. The closest modern cities are Vidin (27 km to the north west), Lom (28 km to the east) in Bulgaria and Calafat (41 km to the north) in Romania.
An archaeological museum for the site has recently been established in Dimovo.[3]
History
Ratiaria was conquered by the Dacians of Burebista[citation needed] and later by the Romans. There was a gold mine in the city, which was exploited by the Thracians. The city may have owed its success to the goldsmiths.[4]
Legio IV Flavia Felix was based here at least until the conquest of Dacia (101-106 AD) when the castrum was abandoned and the settlement became a colonia within Moesia Superior named Colonia Ulpia Traiana Ratiaria (107 AD) after its founder the Emperor Trajan. In the 2nd and 3rd centuries Ratiaria became prosperous as a trade centre and customs port.
A number of Roman patricians (aristocrats) lived in Ratiaria, while the nearby Bononia (today's Vidin) was home to a small military unit.
With the definitive abandonment of Dacia Traiana by Aurelian in 271, the old castra in the region were reopened.
It is unclear whether Aurelian or the Emperor Diocletian replaced Dacia Aureliana with two provinces,[7] but by 285, there were two: – Dacia Mediterranea with its capital at Serdica (Sofia) and Dacia Ripensis with its capital at Ratiaria.[8] As the capital of the new province Ratiaria served both as the seat of the military governor (or dux) and as the military base for the Roman legionXIII Gemina.
The city became an important Christian centre in the 4th century and several bishops are recorded. Palladius of Ratiaria, an Arian Christian theologian, lived here in the late 4th century.
In 440 or 441 the Huns sacked Ratiaria. Rebuilding works were done under Anastasius I,[8] celebrated in the new town's name, Anastasiana Ratiaria. Priscus calls it a prosperous city in the 5th century.[9]
Archaeological excavations of the site began in 1958 and have continued sporadically since then.
Archaeology
Investigative journalist Ivan Dikov states that only a small part of the site, which was excavated in the 1980s by a Bulgarian-Italian mission, is left unexplored and unattended. Dikov continues to say that the remaining 20ha of the site has been illegally dug up by hand and machines and that the site is reduced to hills and craters. According to Dikov, local witnesses saw that at one point in the late 1990s, the site was split between the mayor, the police, local people and high-ranking people from Sofia.[10] In the city, there are ruins of an audience hall with a mosaic of Oprheus, jewelry, and ancient coins.
Findings from Ratiaria, exhibited in Konaka History Museum, Vidin
Ecclesiastical history
As provincial capital of Dacia Ripensis, it also was the Metropolitan archdiocese. In 304 or 305, during the Great Persecution three Christian men named Jan, Aggaeus, and Gaius were executed in the city. Palladius, a bishop of the city, was a strong supporter of Arianism.[11]
Titular see
The archdiocese was nominally restored in 1925 as a Latin Catholic titular archbishopric of the highest (Metropolitan) rank.
The incumbent is Kurian Mathew Vayalunkal, having the following previous incumbents:
^Bury, p. 135. "The date must be A.D. 283, and it is obvious that Aurelian set up the boundary stones, one of which Gaianus restored. There were, then, two Dacias when Diocletian came to the throne and, therefore, Mr. Fillow has inferred that we should read in our List: Dacia <Dacia>, that is presumably Dacia Ripensis and Dacia Mediterranea. Aurelian's Dacia mediterranea might have included Dardania, and Dardania, Mr. Fillow thinks, was split off as a distinct province by Diocletian."