
Drawings of the still-standing pillars
'Trajan's Bridge' (
Romanian: ''Podul lui Traian'';
Serbian: Трајанов мост, ''Trajanov Most'') or 'Bridge of Apollodorus over the Danube' was a
Roman bridge, the first to be built over the lower
Danube. For more than a thousand years, it was the longest arch bridge in the world to have been built, in terms of both total and span length. The bridge was constructed by the architect
Apollodorus of Damascus.
Description
The bridge was situated east from the
Iron Gates, nearby the present-day cities of
Drobeta-Turnu Severin,
Romania and
Kladovo. Its construction was ordered by
Emperor Trajan as a supply route for the Roman legions fighting in
Dacia (''see
Dacian Wars'').
The structure was 1,135 meters in length (the Danube is 800 meters-wide in that area), 15 meters in width, and reached 19 meters in height (measured from the river's surface). At each end was situated a Roman ''
castrum'', each of them built around an entrance (crossing was possible only by walking through the camp).
Its engineer,
Apollodorus of Damascus, used wooden arches set on twenty masonry pillars (made with bricks, mortar and
pozzolana cement) that spanned 38-meters each
[1]. Nevertheless, it was built over an unusually short period of time (between
103 and
105) — one possible explanation is that the river was diverted during the bridge's construction.
A Roman memorial plaque, 4 meters in width and 1.75 meters in height, commemorates the completion of Trajan's
military road completion is located on the Serbian side facing Romania near
Ogradina. It reads:
:IMP. CAESAR. DIVI. NERVAE. F
NERVA TRAIANVS. AVG. GERM
PONTIF MAXIMUS TRIB POT IIII
PATER PATRIAE COS III
MONTIBVUS EXCISI''s'' ANCO''ni''BVS
SVBLAT''i''S VIA''m'' F''ecit''
:(Note: Italics mark parts of the inscription that have ben destroyed by time and were deduced from context)

Ruins on the Romanian bank
The text was interpreted by
Otto Benndorf to mean:
:''Emperor Nerva son of the divine
Nerva, Nerva Trajan, the
Augustus,
Germanicus,
Pontifex Maximus, invested for the fourth time as
Tribune,
Father of the Fatherland,
Consul for the third time, excavating mountain rocks and using wood
beams has made this road.''
Destruction and remains
The bridge was destroyed by
Aurelian, after the Roman Empire withdrew its troops from Dacia.
The twenty pillars could still be seen in the year 1856, when the level of the Danube hit a record low. In 1906, the International Commission of the Danube decided to destroy two of the pillars that were obstructing navigation.
In 1932, there were 16 remaining pillars underwater, but in 1982 only 12 were mapped by archeologists — the other four had probably been swept away by water. Only the entrance pillars are nowadays visible on either bank of the Danube.
[2]

Bridge reconstitution
Further reading
★ Colin O'Connor, Roman Bridges, Cambridge Univ. Press (1994) ISBN 0-521-39326-4
References
1. Troyano, Leonardo Fernández, "Bridge Engineering - A Global Perspective", Thomas Telford Publishing, 2003
2. Romans Rise from the Waters
External links
★
★
Romans Rise from the Waters - Excavations