In 113 AD, Emperor Trajan dedicated Trajan’s Column in Rome, celebrating his victories in Dacia and symbolizing imperial glory. Learn how this monumental structure reflected Rome’s power and architectural mastery.

In 113 AD, Emperor Trajan dedicated Trajan’s Column in Rome, celebrating his victories in Dacia and symbolizing imperial glory. Learn how this monumental structure reflected Rome’s power and architectural mastery.
In 112 AD, Emperor Trajan inaugurated his monumental forum in Rome—an architectural masterpiece that symbolized the height of imperial power and Roman civic life.
After the conquest of Dacia in 106 AD, Roman legions fortified the region with new military structures—consolidating control through engineering, infrastructure, and imperial presence.
Discover how Emperor Trajan’s victory over the Dacians in 106 AD marked a pinnacle of Roman expansion and power, commemorated by immense wealth and architectural legacy.
Emperor Trajan’s conquest of Dacia (101–106 AD) expanded Rome’s borders and secured vast resources, marking one of the empire’s greatest military triumphs.
The Roman-Parthian Wars in the 2nd century CE saw Rome’s legions clash with Parthian cavalry in a brutal struggle for control over the East.
Built in 112 AD, Trajan’s Forum was the largest and most ambitious of Rome’s imperial forums, symbolizing the height of Roman engineering and power.