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Zur Gründung von Prusa ad Olympum

open access: yesTYCHE – Contributions to Ancient History, Papyrology and Epigraphy, 1990
Uber die Grundung von Prusa ad Olympum in Bithynien sind mehrere Angaben uberliefert. Plin., nato hist. V 148 schreibt: Prusa ab Hannibale sub Olympo condita.  Das wird so erklart, das der Bithynerkonig Prusias 1. (ca. 230-182 v. Chr.) die Stadt  auf den Rat des zu ihm gefluchteten Hannibal gegrundet habe.
MERT, İbrahim Hakan   +2 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Some New Inscriptions from the Museum of Bursa

open access: yesGephyra, 2014
In this contribution are presented two new milestones and five grave steleai recorded during our epigraphic research in the depot and the garden of Bursa Archaeology Museum.
Hüseyin Uzunoğlu, Erkan Taşdelen
doaj   +1 more source

New Grave Inscriptions in the Museum of Bursa

open access: yesGephyra, 2010
The Museum of Bursa has a huge number of archaeological and epigraphic artifacts primarily from Bithynia, Mysia and Phrygia. In 2004 we began to continually record the inscriptions that had been brought to the museum since 1993.
N. Akyürek Şahin, Fatih Onur
doaj  

New Inscriptions from Bithynia

open access: yesGephyra, 2007
New Inscriptions from BithyniaIn this article one unpublished Greek dedication inscription from Beyyayla dated to the third century A.D. and eight unpublished funerary Greek inscriptions from Bithynia dated to the Roman Imperial Period are presented ...
Ebru Akdoğu Arca
doaj  

The Social Rise of an Animal Fighter (archikynegos) from Bithynia

open access: yesGephyra, 2010
A funerary inscription recently found in Claudiupolis reveals that the venator/archi­kynegos Iustus was a citizen of the Asian metropoleis of Smyrna, Ephesus and Pergamon as well as of the Bithynian cities of Nicaea and Prusa ad Olympum. Since he and his
Mustafa Adak
doaj  

A Dignitary Family from Nikomedeia

open access: yesGephyra, 2013
The posthumously erected honorary inscription, which today is housed in the Museum of Kocaeli/İzmit, acquaints us with a family of notables from the Bithynian metropolis of Nikomedeia. The monument, which once carried a statue of the deceased on top, was
Mustafa Adak, Konrad Stauner
doaj  
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