Classis Ravennas

{{Short description|Roman fleet based at Ravenna}}

{{RomanMilitary}}

The Classis Ravennas ("Fleet of Ravenna"), later awarded the honorifics praetoria and Pia Vindex, was the second most senior fleet of the imperial Roman Navy after the Classis Misenensis.

History

Ravenna had been used for ship construction and as a naval port at least since the Roman civil wars, but the permanent classis Ravennas was established by Caesar Augustus in 27 BC . It was commanded by a praefectus classis, drawn from the highest ranks of the equestrian class, those with a net worth more than 200,000 sesterces, and its mission was to control the Adriatic Sea and perhaps the eastern part of the Mediterranean Sea. As the honorific praetoria, awarded by Vespasian for its support during the civil war of AD 69,Age of the Galley, p. 80 suggests, together with the classis Misenensis, it formed the naval counterpart of the Praetorian Guard, a permanent naval force at the emperor's direct disposal.

Its home port of Classis (modern Classe), which was named after the fleet, was built under Augustus, and included a canal, the Fossa Augusta, which united the port with the lagoons of the interior, as well as with the river Po to the north.A Companion to the Roman Army, p. 205Age of the Galley, p. 78 Naval arsenals and docks stretched along the Fossa, in a complex that reached {{convert|22|km|abbr=on}} in length. According to a passage by Cassius Dio, related by Jordanes, the harbour could accommodate 250 ships.Jordanes, Getica 150

The classis Ravennas recruited its crews mostly from the East, especially from Egypt. Since Rome did not face any naval threat in the Mediterranean, the bulk of the fleet's crews was idle. Some of the sailors were based in Rome itself, initially housed in the barracks of the Praetorian Guard, but later given their own barracks, the Castra Ravennatium across the Tiber.A Companion to the Roman Army, p. 209 There they were used to stage mock naval battles (naumachiae), and operated the mechanism that deployed the canvas canopy of the Colosseum.Historia Augusta, Commodus XV.6 In 70, Emperor Vespasian also levied the legio II Adiutrix from the marines of classis Ravennas.

In the civil war of 192-193, the fleet supported Septimius Severus, and, together with the classes Misenensis, it participated in the campaign against Pescennius Niger, transporting his legions to the East.Age of the Galley, p. 83 The fleet remained active in the East for the next few decades, where the emergence of the Persian Sassanid Empire posed a new threat that required frequent reinforcements to be ferried.Age of the Galley, p. 84

In 324 the fleet's ships participated in the campaign of Constantine the Great against Licinius and his decisive naval victory in the Battle of the Hellespont. Afterwards, the bulk of the ships were moved to Constantinople, where emperor Constantine had moved the capital of the Roman Empire.

''praefecti classis Ravennatis''

The following list is based on Werner Eck and Hans Lieb, [http://www.jstor.com/stable/20188881 "Ein Diplom für die Classis Ravennas vom 22. November 206"], Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 96 (1993), pp. 85f

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! Name

! Time frame

! Source

Publius Palpellius Clodius Quirinalis

| AD 56

| {{CIL|5|533}} = ILS 2702; Tacitus, Annales 13.30

Marcus Aurelius Regulus

| reign of Nero

| {{CIL|6|3150}}

Lucius Aemilius Sullectinus

| reign of Nero

| {{CIL|13|1770}} = RMD-V 449

Sextus Lucilius Bassus

| 69 (and 71?)

| {{CIL|16|14}} = ILS 1991; Tacitus, Historiae 2.100

Cornelius Fuscus

| 69

| Tacitus, Historiae 3.12

Lucius Cornelius Gratus

| 100

| {{AE|1989|315}} = RMD-III 142

Marcus Ulpius MarcellusEck, Andreas Pangerl [https://www.jstor.org/stable/41616974 "Ein M. Ulpius Marcellus als praefectus classis Ravennatis in einem Diplom des Jahres 119 n. Chr."], Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 181 (2012), pp. 202–206

| 119

| {{AE|2012|1958}}

Lucius Numerius Albanus

| 127

| {{CIL|16|72}}

Marcus Gavius Maximus

| ca. 131/2

|

Marcus Calpurnius Seneca Fabius Turpio Sentinatianus

| before 134

| {{CIL|2|1178}} = ILS 2736; {{CIL|2|1267}}

Fabius Sabinus

| 139

| {{AE|2007|1786}}

Valerius PaetusEck and Margaret Roxan, "Two New Military Diplomas", in Römische Inschriften – Neufunde, Neulesungen und Neuinterpretationen, Festschrift für Hans Lieb, hg. R. Frei-Stolba Basel: M.A. Speidel, 1995), pp. 55-97

| c. 142

| {{AE|1995|1824}} = RMD-IV 264; {{AE|2004|1921}} = RMD-V 392

? Marcus Sempronius Liberalis

| 143/144

| [http://db.edcs.eu/epigr/edcs_id.php?s_sprache=en&p_edcs_id=EDCS-73700013 ZPE-207-232]

Titus Furius Victorinus

| ca. 150

| {{CIL|6|31856}} = ILS  9002

Tuticanius Capito

| 152

| {{CIL|16|100}}

Quintus Baienus Blassianus

| ca. 160

| {{CIL|14|5341}}

Publius Cominius Clemens

| ca. 175

| {{CIL|5|175}} = ILS 1412; [http://db.edcs.eu/epigr/edcs_id.php?s_sprache=de&p_edcs_id=EDCS-01300236 RSH-85]

Lucius Julius Vehilius Gratus Julianus

| ca. 184/5

| {{CIL|6|31856}} = ILS 1327

Gnaeus Marcius Rustius Rufinus

| between 190 and 210

| {{CIL|10|1127}}

Marcus Aquilius Felix

| between 190 and 210

| {{CIL|10|6657}} = ILS 1387; {{AE|1945|80}}

Aemilius Sulleptinus

| 202

| {{AE|2001|2161}} = RMD-V 449

Claudius Diognetus

| 206-209

| {{AE|1993|1789}} = RMD-III 189; {{AE|1976|794}} = RMD-I 73

Marcus Gongius Nestorianus

| 213/217

| {{CIL|16|138}}

Aurelius ElpidephorusEck, Pangerl, [https://www.academia.edu/6100806/Ein_Diplom_f%C3%BCr_die_ravennatische_Flotte_unter_dem_Pr%C3%A4fekten_Aurelius_Elpidephorus_aus_dem_Jahr_221_n._Chr "Ein Diplom für die ravennatische Flotte unter dem Präfekten Aurelius Elpidephorus aus dem Jahr 221 n. Chr."], Acta Musei Napocensis, 45-46 (2008–2009), pp. 193–205

| 221

| {{AE|2012|1946}}

Valerius Oclatius

| 225

| {{AE|1999|1363}} = RMD-IV 311

J[u]lius [---]ucianus

| 249

| {{CIL|16|154}}

Vibius Seneca

| after 250

| {{AE|1968|189}}; cf. I. Eph. 3.737

Voltinius Saloninus

| 3rd C.

| {{AE|1979|290}}

List of known ships

The following ship names and types of the classis Ravennas have survived:

  • 2 quinqueremes: Augustus, Victoria.
  • 6 quadriremes: Fortuna, Mercurius, Neptunus, Padus, Vesta, Victoria.
  • 28 triremes: Aesculapius, Apollo, Aquila, Archinix, Ariadna, Augustus, Castor, Concordia, Costantia, Danae, Danubius, Diana, Felicitas, Hercules, Mars, Mercurius, Minerva, Neptunus, Nereis, Pax, Pietas, Pinnata, Providentia, Silvanus, Triumphus, Venus, Virtus, Victoria.
  • 5 liburnians: Ammon, Diana, Pinnata, Satyra, Varvarina.
  • 5 other vessels: Clementia, Danubius, Hercules, Mercurius, Victoria.

See also

References

{{reflist}}

Sources

  • {{cite book |editor-last=Erdkamp |editor-first=Paul |title=A Companion to the Roman Army |year=2007 |publisher=Blackwell Publishing Ltd. |isbn=978-1-4051-2153-8}}
  • {{The Age of the Galley | last = Rankov | first = Boris | chapter = Fleets of the Early Roman Empire, 31 BC–AD 324 | pages = 78–85}}

Category:Roman Ravenna

Category:Military history of Ravenna

Ravennas

Category:27 BC establishments

Category:Military units and formations established in the 1st century BC