
Moesia - Wikipedia
Moesia (/ ˈmiːʃə, - siə, - ʒə /; [1][2] Latin: Moesia; Greek: Μοισία, romanized: Moisía) [3] was an ancient region and later Roman province situated in the Balkans south of the Danube River. …
默西亚 (罗马行省) - 维基百科,自由的百科全书
默西亚 [1] (希腊语:Μοισία,拉丁语:Moesia),东南欧 巴尔干半岛历史上的地区名,位于今塞尔维亚大部,北马其顿北部、保加利亚北部和罗马尼亚东南部,该地区得名于曾居住在这里的 …
Mesia - Wikipedia
La Mesia (in latino Moesia; in greco Μοισία?, Moisía) è il nome di più province dell'Impero romano (Superior, Inferior; Prima e Secunda), a sud del limes del basso corso del Danubio, …
Moesi - Wikipedia
The name itself was taken from the name of the Mysians in Asia Minor. [8] The choice seems to be related to the fact that the Trojan-era Mysians lived close to the Trojan-era Dardanians. …
Roman Provincias | Provincia Moesia - History Archive
Moesia (/ˈmiːʃə/, /ˈmiːsi.ə/, or /ˈmiːʒə/; Latin: Moesia; Greek: Μοισία) was an ancient region and later Roman province situated in the Balkans, along the south bank of the Danube River.
Moesia | Thrace, Roman Empire, Danube | Britannica
Moesia, province of the Roman Empire, in the southeastern Balkans in what is now Serbia, part of Macedonia, and part of Bulgaria. Its first recorded people were the Moesi, a Thracian tribe. …
Eastern Dacia and Scythia Minor are covered by TIR Romula (1969), which takes an optimistic view of the identification of ancient sites and roads. The western limit of Moesia Inferior is …
The territorial responsibility of duces in Moesia Secunda and …
JACEK WIEWIOROWSKI (POZNAŃ) The territorial responsibility of duces in Moesia Secunda and Scythia Minor in the times of Diocletian. The quaestion of military command in Moesia …
The Roman Auxiliary Units of Moesia - Academia.edu
The Roman province of Moesia, established during Augustus' reign and expanded under Claudius, served as a strategic military region with two main legions and numerous auxiliary …
Society and Myths: How was the name of Moesia invented?
Thus, emperor Tiberius introduced on the Balkans a toponym from northwestern Asia Minor, Mysia/Moesia, first attested in the Lower Danubian lands only in early AD 16. Accordingly, the …