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Tauresium

Coordinates: 41°53′53″N 21°36′41″E / 41.89806°N 21.61139°E / 41.89806; 21.61139
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Tauresium
Remains of building walls in Tauresium
Tauresium is located in North Macedonia
Tauresium
Shown within North Macedonia
Alternative nameGradište
LocationTaor, Skopje Statistical Region, North Macedonia
RegionDardania
Coordinates41°53′53″N 21°36′41″E / 41.89806°N 21.61139°E / 41.89806; 21.61139
TypeSettlement
Site notes
ArchaeologistsArthur Evans
Websitewww.tauresium.info/english/

Tauresium (Latin; Macedonian: Тауресиум), today known as Gradište (Macedonian: Градиште), is an archaeological site in North Macedonia, near the village of Taor. Tauresium is the birthplace of Byzantine Emperor Justinian I (ca. 482) and King Theodahad of the Ostrogoths (480).[1][2] According to other studies, Tauresium was located near the modern city of Niš.[3]

Location and general characteristics

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Remains of the ancient town of Tauresium

Tauresium is located in Zelenikovo Municipality, near the village Taor, some 20 kilometres (12 mi) southeast of Skopje. The site was discovered by British archaeologist Arthur Evans in the late 19th century. According to Justinian's biographer Procopius, the Emperor was born in Tauresium in 482, more precisely in the castle of Bederiana, which is near the modern city of Niš, Serbia.[3]

In the book De aedificiis, Procopius states:

"...Among the Dardanians of Europe who live beyond the boundaries of the Epidamnians, close to the fortress which is called Bederiana, there was a hamlet named Taurisium, whence sprang the Emperor Justinian, the founder of the civilised world. He therefore built a wall of small compass about this place in the form of a square, placing a tower at each corner, and caused it to be called, as it actually is, Tetrapyrgia. And close by this place he built a very notable city which he named Justiniana Prima (this means "first" in the Latin tongue), thus paying a debt of gratitude to the home that fostered him..."[4]

The similarity in the names of Tauresium and Barderia as Taor (Таор) and Bader (Бадер) was brought to attention by Antun Mihanović, the First Austrian Konzul 1836–1858 and proposed to the writer Hun, who stopped on his journey to investigate the location, which is noted in the book Stara Srbija i Makedonija – Spiridion Gopčević. The stories from the local peasants and badly damaged Cyrillic script were not sufficient to prove the theory initially, but later in the Monastery of St. John in Veles, Cyrillic writings were presented to him after which he concluded that this was the same Byzantine City of Tauresium, birthplace of Justinian I, who laid the foundation for The First Golden Age of The Byzantine Empire.[5]

Tauresium and the castle Baderiana were destroyed in an earthquake in 518; the epicenter of the earthquake was in the nearby city of Skupi. As a gesture of gratitude to his birthplace, Justinian I rebuilt the city. According to the excavations that have been done so far[as of?], it is estimated that the oldest parts of Tauresium date from the 4th century, and this oldest part is a castle with four towers known as Tetrapirgia. Regarding Baderiana, Procopius states that it "is a settled castle with oddments from the 4th to 6th century".[2] Baderiana or the modern Bader is located 6 km east of Tauresium and Taor.

References

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  1. ^ Wolfgang Kuhoff (1996). "Theodahadus, Flavius, König der Ostgoten 534-536". In Bautz, Traugott (ed.). Biographisch-Bibliographisches Kirchenlexikon (BBKL) (in German). Vol. 11. Herzberg: Bautz. cols. 824–832. ISBN 3-88309-064-6.
  2. ^ a b "Archaeological site Tauresium" (in Macedonian and English). Museum of the city of Skopje. Archived from the original on 4 March 2011. Retrieved 26 January 2011.
  3. ^ a b Atchity, Kenneth John; McKenna, Rosemary (1998). The Classical Roman Reader: New Encounters with Ancient Rome. Cambridge [England] ; New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press. p. 358. ISBN 978-0-19-512740-9.
  4. ^ "The Buildings of Procopius".
  5. ^ Gopčević, Spiridion (1890). Stara Srbija i Makedonija (in Serbian). Parna štamparija D. Dimitrijevića.
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