Principia of the Legionary Base at Lambaesis

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Illustration

Carole Raddato
by
published on 21 December 2022
Principia of the Legionary Base at Lambaesis Download Full Size Image

The legionary base at Lambaesis in modern-day Algeria was founded shortly before Hadrian's (r. 117-138 CE) visit to the North African provinces in 128 CE. It was the camp of the third legion (Legio III Augusta). The camp covered an area of 21 hectares (51 acres) and had a defensive wall measuring 500 x 420 m (1640 x 1377.95 ft). The principia, entered through an impressive rectangular building, was set around a courtyard with porticoes along three sides. Around the principia were small rooms which served as offices and armouries (armamentaria).

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About the Author

Carole Raddato
Carole maintains the popular ancient history photo-blog Following Hadrian, where she travels the ancient world in the footsteps of Emperor Hadrian.

Cite This Work

APA Style

Raddato, C. (2022, December 21). Principia of the Legionary Base at Lambaesis. World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved from https://www.worldhistory.org/image/16829/principia-of-the-legionary-base-at-lambaesis/

Chicago Style

Raddato, Carole. "Principia of the Legionary Base at Lambaesis." World History Encyclopedia. Last modified December 21, 2022. https://www.worldhistory.org/image/16829/principia-of-the-legionary-base-at-lambaesis/.

MLA Style

Raddato, Carole. "Principia of the Legionary Base at Lambaesis." World History Encyclopedia. World History Encyclopedia, 21 Dec 2022. Web. 22 Dec 2024.

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