Showing 1 - 11 results of 11 for search 'Five Barbarians', query time: 0.07s Refine Results
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    Barbares, militaires et fonctionnaires dans le centre et le centre-ouest de la Gaule durant l’Antiquité tardive. 1re partie : les données by Alain Ferdière

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…This article, published here in two parts, is the result of a paper published at the ATEG Tours Colloquium in 2018, and concerns the examination of all available data about the presence, in a wide Center-Ouest and Center of Gaul, on the one hand of Roman soldiers and officials on the other, of exogenous populations known as “barbarians”, traveling through this territory or settling there, from the end of the 3rd century to that of the 5th century. …”
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    Barbares, militaires et fonctionnaires dans le centre et le centre-ouest de la Gaule durant l’Antiquité tardive. 2e partie : la documentation by Alain Ferdière

    Published 2022-12-01
    “…This article, published here in two parts, is the result of a paper published at the ATEG Tours Colloquium in 2018, and concerns the examination of all available data about the presence, in a wide Center-Ouest and Center of Gaul, on the one hand of Roman soldiers and officials on the other, of exogenous populations known as “barbarians”, traveling through this territory or settling there, from the end of the 3rd century to that of the 5th century. …”
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    Origin and Attribution of the Items in Eastern European Champlevé Enamels Style (Late 2nd – 4th Centuries) Found South-Eastward of the Main Dnieper Area by Oleg A. Radyush

    Published 2024-12-01
    “…Development of local barbarian jewelry styles in Eastern Europe reached its peak in the late 2nd – mid-3rd centuries AD. …”
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    An outline of typology of social relations in the countries of Byzantine civilization in the VII-XIV Centuries by Nerijus Babinskas

    Published 2005-12-01
    “…Rome also continued to develop in this direction, but at the end of antiquity, it reached a deadlock (during the barbarian invasions in the IV-V century AD). Nevertheless, the Roman ruins were "radioactive": Germanic tribes became acquainted with the idea of private property. …”
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