Results 81 to 90 of about 603,615 (107)
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Using Skeletal Remains as a Proxy for Roman Lifestyles

The Routledge Handbook of Diet and Nutrition in the Roman World, 2018
Analysis of human skeletal remains is becoming increasingly common in classical bioarchaeology, particularly because of the way historians and demographers have begun to pair osteological and biochemical data with evidence from archaeology, epigraphy ...
K. Killgrove
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Late phases of housing and craft activity in Roman villas on the NE Adriatic. Case studies from Histria and the Kvarner region (northern Liburnia, province Dalmatia)

2022
By analyzing the evidence of late antique settlement and (re)uses of two Roman villas located in Histria and northern Liburnia (province of Dalmatia), respectively, and comparing them with other regional examples, trajectories of rural occupation in the north-eastern Adriatic are proposed.
E. Cirelli   +3 more
openaire   +3 more sources

Via ducta – Roman Road Building: An Introduction to Its Significance, the Sources and the State of Research

Roman Roads, 2019
The case of Marcus Dunius Paternus, a member of the urban elite in the Roman colony of Aventicum (in the province of Germania superior), serves to exemplify the sources and state of research on Roman road construction in the High Roman Empire.
A. Kolb
semanticscholar   +1 more source

The Relation between Necropolises and Settlements in Roman Liburnia

2011
Since the beginning of recorded history, graves have spanned near the houses and roads, and during the construction of any planned urban or rural settlement an area where deceased would have had their eternal rest had to be planned as well. In the past, i.e.
Jurjević, Marina, Serventi, Zrinka
openaire  

Towards the Liburni: Studies in the Social History of Early Roman Liburnia

2008
The book is written keeping in mind students and all those who are interested in ancient social history topics. Since this is too extensive a subject-matter for a single book, the focus is kept on the family and social structure of the Liburni. In Chapter I the readers are introduced to the people of Liburni, where recent knowledge about their ...
openaire   +1 more source

Maritime trade in the Pre-Roman Period in the Eastern Adriatic: a preliminary report on a ceramic and numismatic evidence in Liburnia

Scripta antiqua, 2015
The period from the 4th to the 1st c. BC on the eastern Adriatic is marked by the rise of commercial traffic and intensified relations with Hellenised parts of the Mediterranean. This trade exchange is mainly conducted by sea on local, regional and wider Mediterranean scope. There is no ample evidence in ancient literary sources about maritime affairs,
Šešelj, Lucijana, Ilkić, Mato
openaire   +1 more source

Approaching the Roman economy of Province Dalmatia through pottery production – the Liburnia case study

2018
In this contribution a short insight into the organisation and activities of project RED - Roman Economy in Dalmatia: production, distribution and demand in the light of pottery workshops (IP-11-2013-3973, HRZZ) is given, illustrating its interdisciplinary approach to pottery and ceramics production in the coastal area of Roman Province of Dalmatia ...
Konestra, Ana, Lipovac Vrkljan, Goranka
openaire  

Burial Rites and Rituals in Roman Liburnia

2017
Roman burials, relying heavily on the superstitions and common beliefs, were in most part formalised and channelled through social conventions and external marks of grief. Majority of Romans believed in survival of human soul that could be potentially dangerous if the living did not respect the deceased's remains and if various burial rituals and rites
openaire  

Women and their Role in Burial in Roman Liburnia

2017
The Roman society was well-known for its attitude towards women, which was usually built on the common belief that men were stronger, more reasonable, capable and basically more important. However, other societies treated women differently, and pre-Roman Liburnians (people inhabiting the territory spanning from the river Raša to the river Krka in ...
openaire   +1 more source

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