Results 21 to 30 of about 3,862 (225)

Roman inscriptions 2006–2010 [PDF]

open access: yes, 2012
The aim of this quinquennial survey remains the same as its predecessor, as for the most part does the format, though the team is regrettably reduced by one.
Salway, Benet   +5 more
core   +1 more source

The last legions: The “barbarization” of military identity in the Late Roman West

open access: yesTabula, 2016
Traditional scholarship has argued that during the fourth and fifth centuries the waning Roman Empire came to rely to a large extent on recruits of foreign, barbarian origin for its defence.
Vedran Bileta
doaj   +1 more source

Military graves from the Late Roman necropolis at slog in Ravna (Timacum Minus) [PDF]

open access: yesStarinar, 2014
The necropolises of the Roman fortification and settlement Timacum Minus, in the village of Ravna, near Knjaževac, were partially explored by systematical and rescue archaeological excavations.
Petković Sofija   +1 more
doaj   +1 more source

Explaining and Elucidating Certain Ambiguities in Zaidari Nasavi’s Nafthat-al-Masdur [PDF]

open access: yesنثرپژوهی ادب فارسی, 2023
Introduction Zaidari’s prose writing is widely regarded as an artistic and rhythmic masterpiece, with his work “Nafthat-al-Masdur” standing out as a tour de force. Despite the scientific and novel explanation provided by Dr.
Zahra Ekhtiari
doaj   +1 more source

SOCIOECONOMIC ASPECTS OF CERAMIC PRODUCTION IN ROMAN THRACE

open access: yesJournal of Ancient History and Archaeology, 2020
The province of Thrace was established in ca. AD 45-46 on the territory of the last Thracian Kingdom. In the course of more than two hundred years, between the second half of the First and the late Third century, ceramic production was developed in an ...
Alexander Harizanov
doaj   +1 more source

Sîn City: Notes on the Moon God of Ḫarrān/Carrhae in the Partho-Roman Period

open access: yesElectrum, 2023
Today the city of Ḫarrān/Carrhae is mainly known for the famous battle, in which the Roman general Crassus was defeated by a Parthian army in 53 BCE.
Michael Blömer
doaj   +1 more source

Soldiers of the Late Roman Army : the protectores (3rd -6th c. A.D.)

open access: yes, 2017
The protectores diuini lateris Augusti, high-ranking soldiers attested in the Roman army from the 3rd c. to the 6th c. AD, have been alternately defined by historians as imperial bodyguards, staff officers, or centurions under a new name. This study, based on a prosopography, aims to resolve the contradictions raised by these interpretations, from a ...
Emion, Maxime
openaire   +2 more sources

The Klimata of Cherson in the Theme Period

open access: yesАнтичная древность и средние века, 2022
The theme period in the Klimata of Cherson started in 841. Using the Khazars’ dependence on the Eastern Roman Empire military assistance, Emperor Theophilos returned the towns and forts located on the Inner Range of the Crimean Mountains and established ...
Aleksandr Il’ich Aibabin
doaj   +1 more source

Roman Army and Its Changes in Late Antiquity [PDF]

open access: yes, 2022
The presented thesis focuses on the role of the army in the late Roman Empire and its changes compared to earlier stages. The work follows the period from the third century, when important military changes begin, until the fall of the Western Roman ...
Lavický, Jeroným
core  

Diet and Nutrition in the Roman Republican Army

open access: yes, 2023
The Romans seem to have recognized, from an early period, the importance of good nutrition for successful warfare. Throughout the Republic, and despite the massive changes which Roman society and the Roman state underwent between 509 and 31 BCE, Rome’s ...
Armstrong, Jeremy
core   +1 more source

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