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A Roman site in the Sárvíz river valley (Pannonia inferior) [PDF]

open access: yesActa Archaeologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 2015
In October 2012 the workshop entitled “Reading Past and Present Landscapes in Central Europe” was held in Hungary. During the workshop, which was focused on exchanging ideas and experience concerning remote sensing methods of detection and registering archaeological sites, a large Roman site near the village of Sárbogárd in Nagyhörcsökpuszta was ...
Agnieszka Tomáš
exaly   +3 more sources
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The Sacred Area at Gorsium (Pannonia Inferior)

Phoenix, 2000
UNTIL ONLY TEN YEARS AGO prolonged discussion reaching back into the nineteenth century seemed finally to have agreed that the centre of the provincial cult of Pannonia Inferior was located at Gorsium, not Aquincum.' Lower Pannonia consequently resembled Pannonia Superior, where the seat of the provincial council looks to have been at Savaria rather ...
exaly   +2 more sources

A new gate-tower type in Pannonia Inferior. The northern gate of Annamatia

Acta Archaeologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 2006
Roman forts can several times be dated only on the basis of the ground-plans of their gate-towers.1 This observation is true in the case of the forts in the Pannonian provinces as well. Here the earlier hypothesis that most of the Pannonian earth-timber castella were built into stone only after the Marcomannic wars on the basis of the gate-towers ...
exaly   +3 more sources

New Light on the Cult Centre at Gorsium (Pannonia Inferior)

Mouseion, 2011
Dans une étude révisée de RIU 1533, G. Alföldy réaffirme que les premières lettres du texte correspondent aux Di Magni—une interprétation approuvée par d'autres épigraphistes éminents—mais propose que ces dieux puissent avoir été vénérés dans le curieux temple aux nefs multiples récemment mis au jour par J. Fisk.
exaly   +2 more sources

Drei Neue Ägyptische Ushabti-Statuetten von Aquincum (Pannonia Inferior)

Acta Archaeologica Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae, 2013
This paper aims to present three Egyptian statuettes of the shaubti (ushabti germ.) type found in the excavations of the Roman settlement of Aquincum (Pannonia Inferior). The first one is dated in the 26th Dynasty (also known as the Saite Dynasty, Inv. no.
exaly   +3 more sources

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