Results 31 to 40 of about 1,248 (89)

From Limes Invisibilis to the UNESCO World Heritage Property – The Danube Frontier in Serbia

open access: yes, 2022
In recent years Roman limes in Serbia became part of a phased, trans-national UNESCO world cultural heritage project “Frontiers of the Roman Empire“. In 2015 a tentative list with sites from Serbian part of the limes was submitted to UNESCO. The national Working group for the nomination of Limes was founded in 2019 by the National Commission for ...
Mrđić, Nemanja   +2 more
openaire   +1 more source

Ceramic building materials of Viminacium [PDF]

open access: yes, 2022
Ceramic building materials1 were one of the key building materials of the Roman Empire. They were introduced to the area of the province of Moesia Superior and ancient Viminacium by the Romans. Prior to their arrival, the province was sparsely urbanised,
Jevtović, Ljubomir
core  

Design of Compatible Mortars for Conservation Interventions [PDF]

open access: yes, 2022
Architectural heritage suffers from many deterioration patterns among which mortar aging and degradation present a significant task for conservation practitioners and scientists. The functional requirements of compatible repair mortars strongly depend on
Delić-Nikolić, Ivana   +5 more
core  

Roman coin hoards of the third century ad found on the territory of Moesia superior, and Serbian part of Dalmatia and Pannonia inferior: the reasons for their burial [PDF]

open access: yes, 2020
The territory of present-day Serbia comprises the area of the former Roman provinces of Moesia Superior, Pannonia Inferior, Dalmatia and Barbaricum (the region between Pannonia Inferior and Dacia).
Redžić, Saša, Vojvoda, Mirjana
core   +1 more source

Compatible Mortars for the Architectural Conservation of the Danube Limes in Serbia – Importance of the Raw Component Characterisation

open access: yes, 2022
Recipes for compatible mortars for conservation must be based on raw materials whose presence was determined during the characterisation of historical mortars used on buildings on which we perform renewal or repairs. Additional materials are often used that improve the resistance of conservation mortars to various influences, while all the time ...
Miličić, Ljiljana   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Las fronetras románicas en la geografía de los Balcanes: el Danubio como frontera [PDF]

open access: yes, 2002
The borders of Romance and Slavonic worlds in the Balkan Peninsula’s linguistic domains lie by the west between Friulan and Venet, on the one hand, and Slovene —as well as Croatian in Istria and Dalmatia— on the other, and by the east between Rumanian ...
Francisco Javier, JUEZ GÁLVEZ
core   +1 more source

Science for Conservation of the Danube Limes - Programme and Abstracts, 1st International Conference with Workshop, Viminacium, Serbia, June 27th – July 1st [PDF]

open access: yes, 2022
The dust that a building is transformed into when it becomes a ruin holds precious traces of the past. The hands of an archaeologist will search through it patiently, and find a necklace bead of a woman that lived in it.

core  

A limes világörökség magyarországi szakaszának területfejlesztési lehetőségei a turizmus és a helyi környezet konfliktusrendszerében [PDF]

open access: yes, 2012
In 2004 the UNESCO World Heritage founded the new heritage category: "The borders of the Roman Empire, the limes”, which includ the Hadrian's Wall (Great Britain, 1987), Upper German-Raetian Limes (Germany, 2005), and Antonine Wall (Great Britain, 2008).
Posta Ádám István
core  

Preface [PDF]

open access: yes, 2022
The dust that a building is transformed into when it becomes a ruin holds precious traces of the past. The hands of an archaeologist will search through it patiently, and find a necklace bead of a woman that lived in it.
Jovičić, Mladen, Nikolić, Emilija
core  

The bronze signum from Timacum Maius and its cultic attribution [PDF]

open access: yes, 2016
The bronze signum discussed in this paper was discovered by archaeological ex­cavation on the site of Timacum Maius in 2010. Found in the area of a luxurious Roman-period building, the artefact shows a tapering body with a central conical socket similar ...
Filipović, Vojislav   +1 more
core   +2 more sources

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