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Your search for 'dc_creator:( "Wittke, Anne-Maria (Tübingen)" ) OR dc_contributor:( "Wittke, Anne-Maria (Tübingen)" )' returned 9 results. Modify search
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Pannonia
(1,883 words)
[German version] I. Up to subjugation by Rome Region and Roman province to the north and east of the Danube (Ister [2]), bordered in the south by the region south of the Savus; the western border ran west of the line between Vindobona, Poetovio and Emona, now the western part of Hungary, the Slovakian territory around Gerulata, the Austrian around the Viennese Basin and Burgenland, as well as the northern strip of Slovenia, Croatia and Serbia. The country was named after its original inhabitants (Παννόνιοι/
Pannónioi, cf. Str. 7,5,2; Παίονες/
Paíones, cf. 1,1,10). This lllyrian group of tribes, exp…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Antioch
(1,581 words)
(Ἀντιόχεια;
Antiócheia). [German version] [1] on the Orontes Founded as Antigonea on the Orontes 307 BC, but after the defeat of Antigonus I by Seleucus I Nicator at Ipsus (301 BC), the town was moved to the site of present-day Antakya (Turkey) in 300 BC, and renamed as A. in honour of the latter's father Antiochus. Capital city of the Seleucid kingdom; it developed under the Seleucids through incorporating numerous settlements into a tetrapolis, each with their own boundary walls. Thanks to its positi…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Engomi
(215 words)
[German version] This item can be found on the following maps: Kypros | Aegean Koine Fortified Bronze Age port settlement of the late Cypriote phase (LC III A) in east Cyprus with palace and sanctuaries (e.g. of the ‘horned’ or ‘ingot god’); workshops for coppersmiths; graves in the town and necropolis; rich finds, especially of metallic material (some inscribed in the Cypriote syllabic script), several hoardfinds. Probably founded early in the 2nd millennium, flowered in the 16th/15th cents. BC because of the international copper trade. Rich burial finds of the 14th/13th cents. (including Mycenaean ware). After destruction in the 13th cent. a planne…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Moesi, Moesia
(984 words)
[German version] A. Geography The members of a group of tribes of Thracian origin who lived in the northeastern part of the Balkan peninsula were referred to, in Greek, as
Moisoí (Μοισοί),
Mysoí (Μυσοί), and in Latin as
M. or
Moesae. Other tribes settled there as well, such as the Dardani, Triballi, Timachi and Skythae, who were later counted among the
Moesicae gentes as inhabitants of the province of Moesia (Plin. HN 3,149; 4,3). After the territory of the Getae was incorporated into the province of Moesia inferior, its inhabitants as well were referred t…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Asia Minor
(16,327 words)
[German version] I. Name Strabo was the first to refer to the peninsula of Asia Minor (AM) west of the Taurus (Str. 2,5,24; 12,1,3; cf. Plin. HN 5,27f.; Ptol. 5,2) as a single unit by the name of
Asia in the narrower sense, as opposed to the continent of Asia. The term of
Asia
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Hagia Irini
(275 words)
This item can be found on the following maps: Kypros [German version] A. Location Near the modern village of Hagia Irini (HI) on the northwest coast of Cyprus there are remains of an ancient port, inhabited from the late Bronze Age to the middle Imperial period. On the altar of a sanctuary outside the town a large number of clay votives was found
in situ. Senff, Reinhard (Bochum) Bibliography E. Gjerstadt et al., Ajia Irini, in: The Swedish Cyprus Expedition, vol. 2, 1935, 642-824 L. Quilici et al., Rapporti di scavo ad Aghia Irini. Studi ciprioti e rapporti di scavo 1, 1971, 9-170 S. Törnquis…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly