Dalmatia

Illyrians
A selection of images of Illyrian warriors. Excerpted from Luke Ueda-Sarson’s Ancient Military History Site

Illyricum- Dalamatia
Brief history of the province excerpted from UNRV History- Roman Empire.

Dalamatia – in ancient sources @ attalus.org
This page © Andrew Smith, 2010

Who was who in the Roman Empire: Dalmatia

The Roman Conquest of Dalmatia and Pannonia under Augustus
By Marjeta Šašel Kos

Legal Status in Roman Dalamatian (The Dalmatian Evidence)
By Antonija Smodlaka Kotur

Internal and External trade in the Roman province of Dalmatia
By Kristina Glicksman

Aspects of Roman Mining in Noricum, Pannonia, Dalmatia and Moesia Superior (S. Dušanić)
by Igor Ćirković. Courtesy of Scribd.

The formation of early imperial peregrine civitates in Dalmatia: (Re)constructing indigenous communities after the conquest
By Danijel Dzino. Courtesy of Academic.edu

The Cult of Silvanus: Rethinking provincial identities in Roman Dalmatia
By Danijel Dzino

Archaeology of Roman Dalmatia
Thirty- four article on Roman Dalmatia. Academic.edu

The Roman Danube: An Archaeological Survey
by J. J. Wilkes. The Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 95 (2005), pp. 124-225

Salona
…capital of the Roman province of Dalmatia in 9 CE. Courtesy of the Ancient History Encyclopedia.

The “Palace” of Diocletian at Split: A Unique Structure from the Later Roman Empire
by Michael Greenhalgh.

Diocletian’s Palace
Courtesy of Wikipedia.

The Emperor’s Mausoleum 
“Having a dead body (no matter how illustrious) within the confines of a city would not have been allowed by the Greeks or by the Romans of the earlier Empire, who found the concept sacriligious as well as unhealthy. By Diocletain’s time, however, the deification of Emperors was an accomplished fact: so as an immortal (via the process of apotheosis – becoming a god) his mausoleum could “look the temple in the eye”, so to speak. The temple might well have been dedicated to the chief of the gods, Jupiter – but it is noticeable that Diocletian’s mausoleum is not only taller and much more decorated, but occupies several times the amound of ground-space.”

Ancient Coinage of Dyrrachium, Illyria.
Courtesy of Wildwinds.

 

Published in:Uncategorized |on May 22nd, 2008 |Comments Off on Dalmatia

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