mostraligabue
» » The Danube Limes a Roman River Frontier

ePub The Danube Limes a Roman River Frontier download

by Sonja Jilek

ePub The Danube Limes a Roman River Frontier download
Author:
Sonja Jilek
ISBN13:
978-8392833079
ISBN:
8392833074
Publisher:
Warsaw University (2009)
Category:
ePub file:
1397 kb
Fb2 file:
1947 kb
Other formats:
mobi mbr txt azw
Rating:
4.8
Votes:
959

The Danubian Limes (German: Donaulimes), or Danube Limes, refers to the Roman military frontier or Limes which lies along the River Danube in the present-day German state of Bavaria, in Austria, Slovakia, Hungary, Serbia, Bulgaria and Romania

The Danubian Limes (German: Donaulimes), or Danube Limes, refers to the Roman military frontier or Limes which lies along the River Danube in the present-day German state of Bavaria, in Austria, Slovakia, Hungary, Serbia, Bulgaria and Romania. The Danube was not always or everywhere used by the Romans as the military frontier which was moved north or south in some locations according to military conquests, but it was maintained in many places as a fairly permanent defensive structure for long periods.

Published so far are volumes on the Roman limes in Hungary (2008), the lower Danube limes in Bulgaria (2008), Slovakia (2008), The Danube Limes: A Roman River Frontier (2009), the Antonine Wall (2009), Hadrian's Wall (2011), the Danube limes in Austria (2011), North Africa (2013), Serbia. Breeze, D. J. 1979, Roman Scotland, a guide to the visible remains, Newcastle upon Tyne: Frank Graham. 1982, The Northern Frontiers of Roman Britain, London: Batsford. 1983, 2nd ed.

Published so far are volumes on the Roman limes in Hungary (2008), the lower Danube limes in Bulgaria (2008), Slovakia (2008), The Danube Limes: A Roman River Frontier (2009), the Antonine Wall (2009), Hadrian's Wall (2011), the Danube limes in Austria (2011), North Africa (2013) and Serbia (2017.

Sonja Jilek - Free download as PDF File . df), Text File . xt) or read . Many Roman military sites on the Middle Danube Limes lay in intensively used areas. xt) or read online for free. 83225962 10 the Definition of River Frontiers. 6 The reconstruction of a Roman ship, sailing down the Danube in Lower Austria in September 2007 (Photo: Boundary Productions).

Part of the SpringerBriefs in Archaeology book series (BRIEFSARCHAE, volume . of the Roman Empire: The Danube Limes: A Roman River Frontier.

Part of the SpringerBriefs in Archaeology book series (BRIEFSARCHAE, volume 2). Abstract. This chapter charts the creation and development of the serial transnational World Heritage Site across different sections of the Roman imperial frontier. In D. Breeze & S. Jilek (Ed., Frontiers of the Roman Empire: The European Dimension of a World Heritage Site (pp. 29–35). Edinburgh: Historic Scotland. Frontiers of the Roman Empire: The Danube Limes: A Roman River Frontier. Warsaw: Hussar Books.

All Roman river frontiers such as the Danube Limes lack these most obvious connecting element(s). Although the rivers form a linear obstacle, which connects the individual monuments, the frontier line and the linearity of the fortification system itself is less easy to define and to present. Forts along the Rhine and Danube river frontiers are between 10 to 30 km apart, and inter-visibility often does not exist.

River frontiers or fortified corridors? . The Roman Frontiers from the viewpoint of a European Archaeologist of today (Eduard Nemeth).

River frontiers or fortified corridors? (Erik Graafstaliii). A Battle of Wills: Manoeuvre Warfare and the Roman defence of the North Yorkshire Coast in the late C4th (A McCluskey). Roman Frontiers in a Globalised World (Session organisers: Richard Hingley, Divya Tolia-Kelly, Rob Witcher): Does History repeat itself?- The Roman Frontiers from the viewpoint of a European Archaeologist of today (Eduard Nemeth). The attraction of opposites: Owen Lattimore and studies of the Inner Asian frontiers of China (Naomi Standen). Changing Presents Interpret the Past, AD 1500-2010: The Frontier on the Limes and the Upper Danube (Peter S. Wells). 2007, Frontiers of the Roman Empire World Heritage Site Proposed Extension The Antonine Wall, 2 volumes, Edinburgh: Historic Scotland.

Sonja Jilek, The Danube Limes a Roman River Frontier, Warsaw 2009 In English and German.