E. Kölb (ed.), Roman Roads: New Evidence, New Perspectives, Berlin 2019, pp. 236-251, 2019
The earliest communication between the Roman world and the central Balkan region started from the... more The earliest communication between the Roman world and the central Balkan region started from the south, from the Roman province of Macedonia. Following
the line of the Vardar and Južna Morava valleys it reached the central Balkan region and the lower Danube at the time the Romans were endeavoring to come
to the Danube in order to subdue the tribes in Thracia. The communication with Italy and the West began during the time when the Roman politics was turning toward the Balkans, in the first century BC. The Roman efforts to connect the military camps in Illyricum with their bases on the lower Danube, divided by the Danube
canyon and the cliffs in Djerdap, began after the new province of Moesia was organized. The first steps were made under Tiberius and Claudius and continued under
Domitian. The main communication from Italy to the East passed through Pannonia and reached the Danube at Singidunum, on the confluence of the Sava River.
It was not until after the time of Domitian that Roman politics became offensive and the legionary camp was established in Viminacium. The roads from Viminacium
went in two main directions: east of the camp, along the Danube and south in the direction towards Dardania and Naissus. From the main Naissus – Lissus ommunication
the road to Scupi branched off at the station of Hammeo, parallel to the old communication along the Južna Morava valley, now neglected because it had
become useless in the new Roman politics. From Naissus the communication led to the Danube in the north, passing from Naissus through Timacum Minus to Ratiaria; and the other one led through Remesiana and Turres to Thrace and further on to Asia Minor.
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the line of the Vardar and Južna Morava valleys it reached the central Balkan region and the lower Danube at the time the Romans were endeavoring to come
to the Danube in order to subdue the tribes in Thracia. The communication with Italy and the West began during the time when the Roman politics was turning toward the Balkans, in the first century BC. The Roman efforts to connect the military camps in Illyricum with their bases on the lower Danube, divided by the Danube
canyon and the cliffs in Djerdap, began after the new province of Moesia was organized. The first steps were made under Tiberius and Claudius and continued under
Domitian. The main communication from Italy to the East passed through Pannonia and reached the Danube at Singidunum, on the confluence of the Sava River.
It was not until after the time of Domitian that Roman politics became offensive and the legionary camp was established in Viminacium. The roads from Viminacium
went in two main directions: east of the camp, along the Danube and south in the direction towards Dardania and Naissus. From the main Naissus – Lissus ommunication
the road to Scupi branched off at the station of Hammeo, parallel to the old communication along the Južna Morava valley, now neglected because it had
become useless in the new Roman politics. From Naissus the communication led to the Danube in the north, passing from Naissus through Timacum Minus to Ratiaria; and the other one led through Remesiana and Turres to Thrace and further on to Asia Minor.
Books
Die Tribus der römischen Soldaten................................................................................. 23
Ein neues Diplom aus Pannonia Inferior und RMD V 401:
wo sind die übringen fünf Kohorten geblieben?............................................................. 33
Epigraphy in Moesia. The Roman Army and Roman Cities ......................................... 41
Euphrata et Romano ConsulIbus auf einem neuen Militärdiplom
von der unteren Sava....................................................................................................... 55
Married and Settled: The Origo,
Privileges and Settlement of Auxiliary Soldiers............................................................. 63
Military diplomas from Viminacium and the settlement of
auxiliary veterans: city or countryside?.......................................................................... 79
Porta Praetoria Semper Hostem Spectare Debet............................................................. 89
The Roster of the VII Claudia Legion............................................................................ 99
Zum Problem der Militärgeschichte Obermösiens im 1. Jahrhundert.......................... 111
Benefiiciari consularis in Sirmium................................................................................ 119
Cohors I Montanorum u Gornjoj Meziji ...................................................................... 215
Die römische Soldatenehe und der „Soldatenstand“.................................................... 221
Septimius Severus und die Legio VII Claudia Antoniniana......................................... 233
Sirmium et l’armée romaine ........................................................................................ 239
The Iron Gates (Đerdap) and the Roman Policy on the
Moesian Limes AD 33-117........................................................................................... 251
Decennalia des Licinius und die Schlacht bei Cibalae.......................................................17
Der Kolonat und die Freiheit..............................................................................................31
Die christliche Kirche und das Christentum in den
zentralillyrischen Provinzen im 4. und 6. Jahrhundert.......................................................49
Два Хијеронимова сна, Ep. XXII 7 и 30..........................................................................71
Eine Schiffslände des späten 6. Jahrhunderts bei Viminacium?.........................................89
Episcopus Aquiensis and Bonosiacorum Scelus...............................................................101
Jerome’s “Malice” and the “Cornicula Decking itself with other Birds’ Plumage”........ 111
Лициније и прогони хришћана у Сингидунуму...........................................................121
Натписи на „царским“ фиалама и фибулама и Лицинијева
пропаганда 316-322. године...........................................................................................129
The Legionary Camps at Singidunum and Viminacium
in the Defensive System in the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Centuries: .................................137
The Staff of Imperial Administration in Sirmium in the
First Half of the Fourth Century.......................................................................................153
Antistes Stefanus и грађевинска делатност
Јустинијанова времена у Полимљу.............................................................................. 169
Ein Tribunus Batavorum in Mediana bei Naissus ............................................................177
Eine spätrömische befestigte Villa in der Provinz Dacia Ripensis...................................183
Ὑπήκοοι und σύμμαχοι Ansiedlung und Rekrutierung von
Barbaren bis zum Jahr 382................................................................................................193
Остроготи у Панонији после 455. године.....................................................................203
The Roman Colonate, Liberty and Justinian’s “Humanity”.............................................213
Villas et domaines dans l’Illyricum central (IVE - VIE siècle)..........................................221
Die Tribus der römischen Soldaten................................................................................. 23
Ein neues Diplom aus Pannonia Inferior und RMD V 401:
wo sind die übringen fünf Kohorten geblieben?............................................................. 33
Epigraphy in Moesia. The Roman Army and Roman Cities ......................................... 41
Euphrata et Romano ConsulIbus auf einem neuen Militärdiplom
von der unteren Sava....................................................................................................... 55
Married and Settled: The Origo,
Privileges and Settlement of Auxiliary Soldiers............................................................. 63
Military diplomas from Viminacium and the settlement of
auxiliary veterans: city or countryside?.......................................................................... 79
Porta Praetoria Semper Hostem Spectare Debet............................................................. 89
The Roster of the VII Claudia Legion............................................................................ 99
Zum Problem der Militärgeschichte Obermösiens im 1. Jahrhundert.......................... 111
Autopragia and the Village Aphrodito............................................................ 5
Child Labour and Taxes in the Agriculture of Roman Egypt:
PAIS AND AFHLIC ...................................................................................... 19
Count Ammonios and Paying Taxes in the Name of
Somebody Else in the Cadastre from Aphrodito .......................................... 31
Dioskoros als Syntelestes ............................................................................. 41
Foreshadowing Later Development or Existing Practise:
Diocletian’s Fiscal Reforms and Changes in the first Three Centuries ...... 53
Katagraphe and the Consecration of Children.............................................. 63
Katagraphe, ownership and tax .................................................................... 91
Les ktétores, les syntelestai et l’impot ....................................................... 107
Roman Military Diplomas, Epistulae and Papyrological Evidence............ 119
Taxes And People: Transactions And Misuses
In The Late Roman And Early Byzantine Egypt....................................... 125
Amita, Soror and Socrus or Cross-Cousin Marriage..................................................21
Anthropology and Epigraphy – the Case of Central Balkan Region..........................27
Der Vater und die Patrizier: qui patrem ciere possent................................................39
Graves, Names and Kinship: Matertera and Amita in Roman Liburnia ....................61
Kinship and Social Structure of Early Roman Society:
Substitution in Function – the Father and the Son........................................ 73
Missing Persons in Early Roman History: Kinship and Power ......................87
Names and Kinship in the Central Balkan Region.
Study Case Andes, Andia, Andinus............................................................ 103
Patria potestas or Murder in the Family....................................................................111
Son-in-law, Mother’s Brother, and Father in Lycian Inscriptions ........................123
Struggle for Power in Early Rome: to Kill the Twin Brother...................................
the line of the Vardar and Južna Morava valleys it reached the central Balkan region and the lower Danube at the time the Romans were endeavoring to come
to the Danube in order to subdue the tribes in Thracia. The communication with Italy and the West began during the time when the Roman politics was turning toward the Balkans, in the first century BC. The Roman efforts to connect the military camps in Illyricum with their bases on the lower Danube, divided by the Danube
canyon and the cliffs in Djerdap, began after the new province of Moesia was organized. The first steps were made under Tiberius and Claudius and continued under
Domitian. The main communication from Italy to the East passed through Pannonia and reached the Danube at Singidunum, on the confluence of the Sava River.
It was not until after the time of Domitian that Roman politics became offensive and the legionary camp was established in Viminacium. The roads from Viminacium
went in two main directions: east of the camp, along the Danube and south in the direction towards Dardania and Naissus. From the main Naissus – Lissus ommunication
the road to Scupi branched off at the station of Hammeo, parallel to the old communication along the Južna Morava valley, now neglected because it had
become useless in the new Roman politics. From Naissus the communication led to the Danube in the north, passing from Naissus through Timacum Minus to Ratiaria; and the other one led through Remesiana and Turres to Thrace and further on to Asia Minor.
Die Tribus der römischen Soldaten................................................................................. 23
Ein neues Diplom aus Pannonia Inferior und RMD V 401:
wo sind die übringen fünf Kohorten geblieben?............................................................. 33
Epigraphy in Moesia. The Roman Army and Roman Cities ......................................... 41
Euphrata et Romano ConsulIbus auf einem neuen Militärdiplom
von der unteren Sava....................................................................................................... 55
Married and Settled: The Origo,
Privileges and Settlement of Auxiliary Soldiers............................................................. 63
Military diplomas from Viminacium and the settlement of
auxiliary veterans: city or countryside?.......................................................................... 79
Porta Praetoria Semper Hostem Spectare Debet............................................................. 89
The Roster of the VII Claudia Legion............................................................................ 99
Zum Problem der Militärgeschichte Obermösiens im 1. Jahrhundert.......................... 111
Benefiiciari consularis in Sirmium................................................................................ 119
Cohors I Montanorum u Gornjoj Meziji ...................................................................... 215
Die römische Soldatenehe und der „Soldatenstand“.................................................... 221
Septimius Severus und die Legio VII Claudia Antoniniana......................................... 233
Sirmium et l’armée romaine ........................................................................................ 239
The Iron Gates (Đerdap) and the Roman Policy on the
Moesian Limes AD 33-117........................................................................................... 251
Decennalia des Licinius und die Schlacht bei Cibalae.......................................................17
Der Kolonat und die Freiheit..............................................................................................31
Die christliche Kirche und das Christentum in den
zentralillyrischen Provinzen im 4. und 6. Jahrhundert.......................................................49
Два Хијеронимова сна, Ep. XXII 7 и 30..........................................................................71
Eine Schiffslände des späten 6. Jahrhunderts bei Viminacium?.........................................89
Episcopus Aquiensis and Bonosiacorum Scelus...............................................................101
Jerome’s “Malice” and the “Cornicula Decking itself with other Birds’ Plumage”........ 111
Лициније и прогони хришћана у Сингидунуму...........................................................121
Натписи на „царским“ фиалама и фибулама и Лицинијева
пропаганда 316-322. године...........................................................................................129
The Legionary Camps at Singidunum and Viminacium
in the Defensive System in the Fourth, Fifth and Sixth Centuries: .................................137
The Staff of Imperial Administration in Sirmium in the
First Half of the Fourth Century.......................................................................................153
Antistes Stefanus и грађевинска делатност
Јустинијанова времена у Полимљу.............................................................................. 169
Ein Tribunus Batavorum in Mediana bei Naissus ............................................................177
Eine spätrömische befestigte Villa in der Provinz Dacia Ripensis...................................183
Ὑπήκοοι und σύμμαχοι Ansiedlung und Rekrutierung von
Barbaren bis zum Jahr 382................................................................................................193
Остроготи у Панонији после 455. године.....................................................................203
The Roman Colonate, Liberty and Justinian’s “Humanity”.............................................213
Villas et domaines dans l’Illyricum central (IVE - VIE siècle)..........................................221
Die Tribus der römischen Soldaten................................................................................. 23
Ein neues Diplom aus Pannonia Inferior und RMD V 401:
wo sind die übringen fünf Kohorten geblieben?............................................................. 33
Epigraphy in Moesia. The Roman Army and Roman Cities ......................................... 41
Euphrata et Romano ConsulIbus auf einem neuen Militärdiplom
von der unteren Sava....................................................................................................... 55
Married and Settled: The Origo,
Privileges and Settlement of Auxiliary Soldiers............................................................. 63
Military diplomas from Viminacium and the settlement of
auxiliary veterans: city or countryside?.......................................................................... 79
Porta Praetoria Semper Hostem Spectare Debet............................................................. 89
The Roster of the VII Claudia Legion............................................................................ 99
Zum Problem der Militärgeschichte Obermösiens im 1. Jahrhundert.......................... 111
Autopragia and the Village Aphrodito............................................................ 5
Child Labour and Taxes in the Agriculture of Roman Egypt:
PAIS AND AFHLIC ...................................................................................... 19
Count Ammonios and Paying Taxes in the Name of
Somebody Else in the Cadastre from Aphrodito .......................................... 31
Dioskoros als Syntelestes ............................................................................. 41
Foreshadowing Later Development or Existing Practise:
Diocletian’s Fiscal Reforms and Changes in the first Three Centuries ...... 53
Katagraphe and the Consecration of Children.............................................. 63
Katagraphe, ownership and tax .................................................................... 91
Les ktétores, les syntelestai et l’impot ....................................................... 107
Roman Military Diplomas, Epistulae and Papyrological Evidence............ 119
Taxes And People: Transactions And Misuses
In The Late Roman And Early Byzantine Egypt....................................... 125
Amita, Soror and Socrus or Cross-Cousin Marriage..................................................21
Anthropology and Epigraphy – the Case of Central Balkan Region..........................27
Der Vater und die Patrizier: qui patrem ciere possent................................................39
Graves, Names and Kinship: Matertera and Amita in Roman Liburnia ....................61
Kinship and Social Structure of Early Roman Society:
Substitution in Function – the Father and the Son........................................ 73
Missing Persons in Early Roman History: Kinship and Power ......................87
Names and Kinship in the Central Balkan Region.
Study Case Andes, Andia, Andinus............................................................ 103
Patria potestas or Murder in the Family....................................................................111
Son-in-law, Mother’s Brother, and Father in Lycian Inscriptions ........................123
Struggle for Power in Early Rome: to Kill the Twin Brother...................................
Iz predgovora
a chance to be a new king was abolished with the last of the kings.