Moesia

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

The Roman Provinces in Modern Bulgaria
Courtesy of the Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums für Archäologie.

Setting up of the Roman provincial structure in Moesia
Courtesy of the Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums für Archäologie.

Cities in the Provinces Moesia Superior and Moesia Inferior
Courtesy of the Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums für Archäologie.

Legal Status
Courtesy of the Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums für Archäologie.

Romans in Geto-Dacian Land South of the Danube
Courtesy of Romanian History and Culture.

Who was who in Roman Times: Moesia

Archaeologia Bulgarica
“Archaeologia Bulgarica is a new and the only one Bulgarian archaeological review in foreign language.It is a four-month journal (thrice a year; 20,5 X 27,5 cm; 100 pages and ca. 80 illustrations per a number; coloured cover) which presents a publishing forum for research in archaeology in the widest sense of the word.There are no restrictions for time and territory but Southeastern Europe.”

The Transition to Late Antiquity
Andrew Poulter. “Combined large-scale excavations and innovative intensive field survey, northern Bulgaria”

Ammianus Marcellinus on the Geography of the Pontus Euxinus by Jan Willem Drijvers.
Histos, Volume 2 (1998).

Romans on the Danube: Durostorum by Rumen Ivanov
Athena Review Vol.2, no.3 (2000)

Roman fortresses and cities along the River Danube
Athena Review Athena Review Image Archive: The Danube: Index

The Roman Army in Moesia Inferior, Bucharest, 2010 (Centre for Roman Military Studies 7)
By Florian Matei-Popescu. Courtesy of Academia.edu

The Presence of the Roman Army from Moesia Inferior to the North of the Danube and the Making of the Dacia Inferior province.
By Florian Matei-Popescu. Courtesy of Academia.edu

Minor Fortifications in the Balkan-Danubian Area from Diocletian to Justinian
By Constantin Băjenaru. Courtesy of Academia.edu

Novae Canabae Project
Field survey on the area of the canabae and late Roman suburbium of the fortress of Novae

The South Border of Lower Moesia from Hadrian to Septimus Severus
By Dilyana Boteva Courtesy of Academia.edu

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

Tropaeum Traiani-The City
A study of the monument as well as a brief overview of the history of the region

Tropaeum Traiani 
Courtesy of Wikipedia

Roman Military Artwork as Propaganda on the Danubian Frontier A Reevaluation of the Tropaeum Traiani
By Jonathan Michael Quiery

Viminacium: Roman City and Legionary Fort Capital City of Lower Moesia
Courtesy of the Archaeological Institute Beograd.

Viminacium
Courtesy of Livius.org. All content copyright © 1995–2018 Livius.org. All rights reserved.

Viminacium
Princeton Encyclopedia of Classical Sites. Courtesy of the Perseus Digital Library.

Roman Army Religion in the Province of Lower Moesia. – In: The Lower Danube Roman Limes (1st – 6th c. AD).
By AОлег Александров. Courtesy of academia.edu

Roman governors of Lower Moesia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Names of Governors and Legates on the coins of Moesia Inferior

Thrace and Moesia
Popular Coins form the Roman Provincial Series. Excerpted from Doug Smith’s Ancient Greek and Roman Coins

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


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

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