ORCID Profile
0000-0001-8681-9508
Current Organisations
University of Adelaide
,
Macquarie University
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History: Classical Greek And Roman | Historical Studies | History: European | Race And Ethnic Relations
Publisher: Routledge
Date: 20-04-2023
Publisher: Archaeopress Publishing Ltd
Date: 04-03-2021
DOI: 10.2307/J.CTV1JK0JGN
Publisher: BRILL
Date: 24-09-2018
Publisher: Brepols Publishers NV
Date: 05-2015
Publisher: Faculty of Philosophy, University of Novi Sad
Date: 19-12-2016
Abstract: Appian’s Illyrian book (Illyrike) was originally intended to be just an appendix to his Macedonian book and today remains the only extant ancient work dealing with the early history of Illyricum which is preserved in its entirety. In this short work Appian puts together different local and regional histories in order to create a unified historical narrative and determines the historical and mythological coordinates of Illyricum inside the ancient world. This paper will discuss Illyrike in the context of the Roman construction of Illyricum as a provincial space, similar to some other regions in continental Europe such as, for ex le, Gaul or Britain. They were all firstly created through the needs of Roman political geography and later written into literary knowledge through the works of ancient history and ethnography. This paper will argue that Appian’s Illyrike represented the final stage of the Roman construction of Illyricum from an imaginary to a provincial space, which was the point of its full coming of age as an integral part of the ancient world and the Roman Empire.
Publisher: Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Date: 12-09-2013
Publisher: Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Date: 12-2008
Publisher: Brepols Publishers NV
Date: 2008
Publisher: BRILL
Date: 22-09-2021
Publisher: CAIRN
Date: 08-2014
DOI: 10.3917/DHA.402.0045
Publisher: BRILL
Date: 30-08-2018
Publisher: BRILL
Date: 30-08-2018
Publisher: Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Date: 11-2010
DOI: 10.1017/S0066477400002094
Abstract: C. Ravonius Celer was a sailor of the Misene fleet from Dalmatia. C. Ravonius Celer qui et Bato Scenobarbi (f.) from Naples (CIL 10.3618 = Dessau 2901): D(IS) M(ANIBUS) / C(AIUS) RAVONIUS CELER QUI ET BATO SCE / NOBARBI NATION(E) DAL[M(ATA)] / MANIP(U)L(ARIS) EX (TRIREME) ISID[E MIL(ITAVIT) ANN(IS)] XI VIXIT [ANN(IS) …] / P(UBLIUS) AELIUS V[…] I VENER[(E)…] This inscription from his tombstone provides important evidence about the process of construction of in idual identities in the period of the early principate, for it reveals the parallel existence of Roman and indigenous identity in a funerary context, commemorating C. Ravonius Celer, who is also at the same time Bato, a son of Scenobarbus of the Dalmatian ‘nation’. This inscription records the two identities of C. Ravonius Celer/Bato, which were incorporated into his personality as an essential part of who he was, revealing both his private and public self.
Publisher: Brepols Publishers NV
Date: 05-2019
Publisher: Routledge
Date: 25-10-2020
Publisher: Wiley
Date: 11-01-2016
DOI: 10.1002/9781118455074.WBEOE016
Abstract: The Serbian Empire is the product of policies and military success of the Serbian king Stefan Uroš IV, better known as Stefan Dušan (r.1331–1355), who crowned himself the emperor “of the Serbs and the Greeks” in 1346. The empire effectively existed in name until the death of Dušan's son Uroš in 1371, when it split into smaller parts.
Publisher: Routledge
Date: 17-03-2016
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH
Date: 06-2011
Abstract: This paper re-examines the sources reporting on the c aigns of Asinius Pollio in 40/39 BC, and reviews the scholarly debate about the targets and aims of his c aigns. In the debate a new source is introduced, the passage on Pollio′s conquest of Salona, from the medieval Historia Salonitana of Thomas the Archdeacon of Spalatum (Split). The analysis shows that the passage from Thomas does not correspond with any known source and it suggests that he used a more substantial report on the siege and capture of Salona, probably from the textual tradition of the Vergilian scholia , which sprung from the lost commentary of Aelius Donatus. The existence of this textual tradition about Pollio′s c aign in central Dalmatia in the Vergilian scholia and the “Epitomes” of Florus, in conjunction with Horace′s mention of Pollio′ s Dalmatian triumph, makes it more certain that Pollio c aigned in central Dalmatia.
Publisher: Brepols Publishers NV
Date: 07-2017
Publisher: No publisher found
Date: 2018
Publisher: Eötvös Loránd University
Date: 31-07-2023
Abstract: This paper discusses the problem of the appearance of the Serb ethnonym in the Balkans, as evidenced in the ninth-century Frankish Royal Annals and the mid-tenth-century Byzantine treaty De Administrando Imperio. Written evidence is analysed together with available archaeological information in order to criticize currently dominating ideas concerning the Serb migration in the seventh century, as well as to offer different perspectives on the origins of the early medieval Serb ethnonym in the Balkans.
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Date: 21-01-2010
Abstract: Illyricum, in the western Balkan peninsula, was a strategically important area of the Roman Empire where the process of Roman imperialism began early and lasted for several centuries. Dzino here examines Roman political conduct in Illyricum the development of Illyricum in Roman political discourse and the beginning of the process that would integrate Illyricum into the Roman Empire and wider networks of the Mediterranean world. In addition, he also explores the different narrative histories, from the romanocentric narrative of power and Roman military conquest, which dominate the available sources, to other, earlier scholarly interpretations of events.
Publisher: Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts
Date: 2017
DOI: 10.21857/YGJWRC6RZY
Start Date: 2010
End Date: 2013
Funder: Australian Research Council
View Funded ActivityStart Date: 2019
End Date: 2023
Funder: Croatian Science Foundation
View Funded ActivityStart Date: 2015
End Date: 2019
Funder: Croatian Science Foundation
View Funded ActivityStart Date: 02-2010
End Date: 06-2014
Amount: $275,000.00
Funder: Australian Research Council
View Funded Activity