Results 71 to 80 of about 603,615 (107)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Lucius Artorius Castus and the borders of the province of Liburnia with Italy under Marcus Aurelius
Storicamente, 2023The career of the equestrian Lucius Artorius Castus is reconstructed from the sepulchral inscriptions from Podstrana, situated in the territory of the Roman Salona. Castus’ final recorded function was the one of the procuratorial governor of the province
Ž. Miletić, Silvia Bekavac
semanticscholar +1 more source
The Roman Occupation of Britain and Its Legacy, 2021
A study of religion in Roman Britain which uses a wide range of archaeological evidence to shed light on oriental cults, such as Mithraism and other Eastern religions, Roman religion in all aspects of life, and the relationship between paganism and ...
M. Henig
semanticscholar +1 more source
A study of religion in Roman Britain which uses a wide range of archaeological evidence to shed light on oriental cults, such as Mithraism and other Eastern religions, Roman religion in all aspects of life, and the relationship between paganism and ...
M. Henig
semanticscholar +1 more source
A new bath complex in Late Roman Dyrrachium (Albania)
Journal of Roman Archaeology, 2021This note considers a Late Roman bath building recently discovered in Durrës, Albania (ancient Dyrrachium), near the presumed Roman city center. This discovery is particularly interesting given our limited knowledge of the urban layout and of bathhouses ...
Brikena Shkodra-Rrugia
semanticscholar +1 more source
Journal of Roman Archaeology, 2020
The first meeting of specialists from different fields relating to research on the Roman army in Hispania took place in Segovia in 1998 under the title “Roman Military Archaeology in Hispania”.
Ángel Morillo +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
The first meeting of specialists from different fields relating to research on the Roman army in Hispania took place in Segovia in 1998 under the title “Roman Military Archaeology in Hispania”.
Ángel Morillo +3 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Freedom in Marriage? Manumission for Marriage in the Roman World
Journal of Roman Studies, 2020This article examines marriage as a pathway to free status for enslaved women in the early imperial Roman world, arguing that women manumitted for marriage to their former owners experienced a qualified form of freedom.
Katharine P. D. Huemoeller
semanticscholar +1 more source
Renewed work at the Roman camps at Renieblas near Numantia (2nd-1st c. B.C.)
Journal of Roman Archaeology, 2020Iberia was one of the first overseas territories to fall under Roman control when the provinces of Hispania Citerior and Ulterior were established in 197 B.C., preceded only by Sicilia (241) and Sardinia et Corsica (227).1 Renieblas and the sites ...
Alicia Jiménez +4 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
Reconstructing the Roman Climate
The Science of Roman History, 2018This chapter frames our current state of knowledge about the physical climate in the period of the Roman Empire's expansion, flourishing, and final fragmentation, at roughly 200 BCE to 600 CE.
K. Harper, M. McCormick
semanticscholar +1 more source
Cultural integration, social change and identities in late Iron Age and Roman Liburnia
2022This thesis aims to investigate key issues relating to cultural and social developments in Late Iron Age and Roman Liburnia, based on analysis of archaeological material and ancient written sources. The Late Iron Age, ca. 4th-1st c. BCE, was a period of intensive connectivity and cultural change in Dalmatia that resulted from the Greek economic ...
openaire +1 more source
New visions of the countryside of Roman Britain
Journal of Roman Archaeology, 2019ALEXANDER SMITH, MARTYN ALLEN, TOM BRINDLE and MICHAEL FULFORD, NEW VISIONS OF THE COUNTRYSIDE OF ROMAN BRITAIN, Volume 1: THE RURAL SETTLEMENT OF ROMAN BRITAIN (Britannia Monograph Series no. 29; Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies, London, 2016).
P. Booth
semanticscholar +1 more source
Buried Far Away: Easterners in Roman Liburnia
Annales Universitatis Apulensis. Series Historica, 2015Ancient Liburnia, stretching along the Eastern coast of the Adriatic Sea, has always been a sea-faring region, and its people - the Liburni - have always been regarded as notorious pirates and sea-people. As such, the region has been visited by foreigners from both the West and the East.
Kurilić, Anamarija, Serventi, Zrinka
openaire +1 more source

