1. Itin. Hieros. 578.2; Itin. Anton. 145.3. Several miliarii (milestones), indicating the distance between Faustinopolis and Tyana or the Cilician Gates, have been found. The findings date back to the period 218-238 AD. French, D., Roman Roads and Milestones of Asia Minor I: The Pilgrim’s Road (BAR 105, Oxford 1981), pp. 90-91, no. 60 A-C, pp. 122-123, table 11a-b, maps 2, 6. 2. SHA, Marcus Antoninus 26.4-9. 3. Hierocl., Synecd. 700.3. It was a catalogue of the cities of the eastern part of the Roman Empire per province, according to their geographical location. It was probably based on an official catalogue dating back to the mid-5th cent. AD. See Hornblower, S. – Spawforth, A. (ed.), The Oxford Classical Dictionary (Oxford 1999), p. 705. 4. SHA, Marcus Antoninus 26.9, Caracal. 11.7, Heliogab. 1.5; Mattingly, H., “The Consecration of Faustina the Elder and the Daughter”, HThR 41 (1948), pp. 147-151; Winter, E., Staatliche Baupolitik und Baufürsorge in den römischen Provinzen der kaiserzeitlichen Kleinasien (Asia Minor Studies 20, Bonn 1996), p. 116. |