In Search of Territories in Southwestern Thrace: The Peraia of Samothrace, the Strategy of Korpilike and the Civitas of Traianopolis (original) (raw)
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Notes on Governors of Roman Thrace. – Bulletin of the National Archaeological Institute, 44, 2018
Bulletin of the National Archaeological Institute, 2018
The paper presents new information on ten governors of the province of Thrace from the early second century AD to the Tetrarchic period. Examination of recently found inscriptions, revision of previous readings, and comparison of epigraphic and literary sources enable us to identify several unknown governors and to propose more precise chronology for others.
The impact of Rome on the landscapes of Aegean Thrace: an archaeological approach , 503- 516
Annuario della Scuola Archeologica di Atene e delle Missioni Italiane in Oriente 99.1,, 2021
Aegean Thrace, the long strip of land that stretches between the river Nestos and Hebrus fell into the grasp of Roman power almost immediately after the submission of Macedonia in 168 BC. The intricate relationships of Rome with the Greek cities along the North Aegean coast and the rivaling royal Thracian houses (relationships that ranged from the exercise of brute force to the production of different alliances and the support of a Thracian client kingdom) are well documented and long known to historiography. As elsewhere the impact of Rome has been regarded to have had a tremendous effect on the organization of the area with changes in the existing hierarchies. The question of course is how this impact is manifested in terms of archaeology (especially through features like via Egnatia). What changes did the advent of Rome bring in the settlement pattern and the rural landscape of this culturally diverse area, which in many aspects was radically different from that of central and southern Greece, the core of the ancient Greek cities? Tumuli, open air sanctuaries, native settlements, megalithic monuments and rock cut graves, strongholds and enceintes along with more conventional Greek type sites belonging (or influenced) to the coastal Greek cities like Abdera or Maroneia dotted a landscape that was dominated by the Rhodope range in the north and the alluvial plain in the south. Despite the great variety of features, there are significant gaps in the knowledge of this landscape. For many years the academic interest was mainly focused on the Greek colonies on the littoral and only limited research (by some of the pioneers in the archaeology of the area like D. Triantaphyllos) has been conducted which tried to bring to the surface the wide range of different types of rural sites. The aim of the paper is to present an overview of the rural landscape of the area, discuss issues regarding site typology, site hierarchy and identification problems but also to examine to what degree this multivariate environment changed over the late republican and imperial period .
2018
Although the study of Late Antiquity has experienced a great deal of growth in recent years, there is still relatively little attention given to the economically and strategically important provinces of central and southern Thrace. Most studies of urbanism in the eastern Balkans have focused on the Danubian frontier area, particularly due to the influence of the excavations at Nicopolis ad Istrum. These studies, however, are inherently shaped by the heavily-militarized nature of the limes and its direct opposition to external threats to the empire; such factors cannot be assumed for cities located in the non-riparian provinces of Thrace south of the Stara Planina. This paper, therefore, analyzes the position of three inland Thracian cities – Philippopolis, Beroe, and Diocletianopolis – in the landscape and their effect on the ecclesiastical construction throughout the province of Late Antique Thracia. Specifically, it considers the archaeological data collected in the Tabula Imperii...