Trajanic
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English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adjective
[edit]Trajanic (comparative more Trajanic, superlative most Trajanic)
- Of or relating to Trajan (53–117 AD), emperor of Ancient Rome from 98 AD until his death.
- Synonym: Trajanian
- 1889, Wilhelm Lübke, Text to Monuments of Art, Showing Its Development and Progress from the Earliest Artistic Attempts to the Present Period, New York, N.Y.: Stroefer, page 122:
- The column, erected in honor of this emperor after his victory over the Marcomannos, shows, in spiral form, splendid reliefs, which remind us of Trajanic art remains.
- 2000, I[ain] M. Ferris, Enemies of Rome: Barbarians Through Roman Eyes, The History Press, published 2013, →ISBN:
- The siting of the Trajanic victory monument here was obviously a way of declaring that the defeats of the past reign had been avenged and that the military honour of Rome had been reclaimed.
- 2013, G[regory] O[wen] Hutchinson, Greek to Latin: Frameworks and Contexts for Intertextuality, Oxford, Oxon: Oxford University Press, →ISBN, page 79:
- At Tauromenium, the Trajanic or Hadrianic reconstruction of the theatre was accompanied by the building of an odeion for performance on a smaller scale.