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, Inventarnummer: 50725. ( Abb. 9 ) Rekonstruierte Höhe 26–28 cm, Mündungsdurchmesser 8 cm, Henkellänge 16 cm. Datierung: erstes Jahrzehnt des 3. Jahrhunderts n. Chr. 9 Bronzekrug. Beschädigt, mit Ersatzhenkel. Fundort: Aquincum, Grab XXVIII. Begleitfund: eine
Fructus, Attianus, Ariomanus
Restoring two altar-inscriptions from Poetovio
Fructus, Attianus, Ariomanus
Két poetovioi oltárfelirat kiegészítése
However, as with the names Attius and Attidius, a follower of a cult does not necessarily bear a theophoric name of this kind, even if two altars dedicated to Arimanus are known from Aquincum. 51 Of the possible names, Ariomanus occurs three times in
Kötter (2016) 312–315. 38 de Boor (1932) 6–7, 8; Németh (1940) 154, 163, 168, 171, 173, 186–187, 206, 215. 39 The cursus publicus needed at least 11–12 days to get from Aquincum to Rome even during the Principate (as it is attested in the case of
–Leipzig 1924–1926 . 10.1515/9783111412184 Alföldi 1942 = A. Alföldi : Aquincum a későrómai világban [Aquincum in the Late Roman world] . In: Budapest története. I . Ed.: K. Szendy. Budapest 1942 , 670 – 746 . Altheim 1962 = F. Altheim
Vulgar Latin (Latin vulgaire – latin tardif XIII). Acta Antiqua Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 59 . Akadémiai Kiadó , Budapest , pp. 537 – 546 . Vágási , T. ( 2020 ). Minitrae et Numini eius. A Celtic deity and the Vulgar Latin in Aquincum
defending against attacks by the Quadi from across the Danube, as well as for control-ling trade across the river. Fig. 1. 1: Late Roman forts in the Danube Bend between Solva and Aquincum ( Visy 2003 ); 2: The ground plan of the fort uncovered in Visegrád
One of the important cemetery and settlement of the Celts lies in a plateau on the southern side of the the Öreg Rába river, in the vicinity of Győr-Ménfőcsanak. The first burials were found in 1967 during a short rescue excavation, however it made Ménfőcsanak a key La Tène site in the Carpathian Basin. Excavations investigated on a larger scale in the area of previously known cemetery in 1993–94. The burial rite of the necropolis was mainly inhumation and only two graves were cremated and two biritual graves. Celtic warriors with swords and richly furnished female with fibulae, coral, amber, and glass beads jewelry were also buried in this part of cemetery. Few graves were limited by rectangular enclosing trenches. According to find analyzing this part of the cemetery dates to the LT B period, and that is why Ménfőcsanak became an important archaeological site in terms of burials in the history of the Celtic “migrations” in the fourth century BC.