Results 51 to 60 of about 839 (206)
What happened to the Galatian Christians? Paul's legacy in Southern Galatia
Paul’s Letter to the Galatians points to the influence of his missionary attempts in Galatia. By reconstructing the missionary journeys of Paul and his company in Asia Minor the author argues once again for the south Galatian hypothesis, according to ...
Cilliers Breytenbach
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This article opens a series devoted to investigating the sources of the ample zoological excursus (vv. 916–1223) in the Hexaemeron by George of Pisidia, a 7th-century Byzantine poet.
Vsevolod V. Zeltchenko
semanticscholar +1 more source
Some Inscriptions in the Isparta Museum
In this paper, the continuation of Özlem Aytaçlar's “Some Unpublished Inscriptions in the Isparta Museum” in Adalya 13 (2010), 223-251, are presented some funerary inscriptions, which, with the exception of one are unpublished and a votive to Poseidon ...
Pınar Aytaçlar
doaj
The old question as to when Lycia, Pamphylia (and southern Pisidia) were first combined into a double province can now be reliably answered thanks to a new epigraphic document. In 71–72 CE Vespasian had parts of the Via Sebaste in the Pisidian-Pamphylian
Mustafa Adak, Mark Wilson
doaj
Roma Devri Küçük Asyası'nda Sporcu Dernekleri: Pisidia Antiokheia Örneği
Tüm kurumlar gibi antik dönemin sanatçı ve sporcu dernekleri de bir dizi temel ihtiyacın neticesi olarak ortaya çıkıp gelişmiştir. Başlangıçta sınırlı bir coğrafyada -Hellas anakarasında- düzenlenen agonistik festivallere (bedensel, atlı ve müzikal ...
Recep Altın
semanticscholar +1 more source
Komama’nın Kuzey Territoriumunda Yeni Keşfedilen Bir Yerleşme: Pancarlı Tepe
1800’lü yıllarda araştırmacılar tarafından yazıtlar yardımıyla Şeref Höyük üzerine lokalize edilen Komama, Pisidia Bölgesi’nin orta kesimlerinde, güneybatıya açılan vadiler arasındadır.
Bilge Ayca Polat Becks
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Adam Paluchowski, The Relations between the cities of central Crete and of Pisidia and Phrygia under the early Roman Empire: Gortyn andSelge, Arcades and Tibériopolis of Phrygia, DHA 34/1, 1008, 45-57.
Adam Paluchowski
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On inscriptions from Asia Minor II
This article proposes thoughts and corrections to three inscriptions: 1. In a text from near Nikaia in Bithynia, the word “Leukes” after the mention of Zeus is interpreted as the genitive of the name of the village “Leuke”, not as a personal name.
Thomas Corsten
doaj
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
openaire +4 more sources

