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under Galba.” 3 Cf. Gowing (1990) and Molin (2016) . 4 Cf. Philostratus, Sophists' Lives 2. 10. 5 Roman Hist . 72. 4. 2: I state these and subsequent facts from my own observations. 6 Justinian, Inst . 1. 2. 8, and Gellius XIII 13. 1. 7 Roman
Justinian. Cambridge 2005; M. M aas (ed.): Cambridge Companion to the Age of Attila. Cambridge 2014. 5 For a discussion of this concept, cf. K h. R ezakhani : The road that never was: The Silk Road and Trans-Eurasian exchange. Comparative Studies of South
and above all from the Digest of the emperor Justinian, that sacred places stopped being sacred when they were taken by enemies, in the same way as free people became slaves: Cum loca
. Abstracts. Bury 1923 J.B. Bury : History of the Later Roman Empire . From the Death of Theodosius I to the Death of Justinian. 1 . London 1923 . Cioba nu—Constantinescu 2008 D. Ciobanu; - E.M. Constantinescu : Die Hunnen im Nordosten
In 551 the Kutrigurs led by Chinialon raided the Balkan territories of Byzantium in alliance with the Gepids. Emperor Justinian (527–565) could bribe the Utigurs to attack the undefended homeland of the Kutrigurs. 42 In 558 the Kutrigurs, maybe under
experienced by Priscus on his way to Attila's court via the ruined Naissus (Exc. 8.13–14). In one of the Novellae of 535, Justinian refers back to how the seat of the praefectura was brought to Thessalonica from Sirmium, which had been destroyed in Attila
–567), later belonged to East Rome until 582 when the Avars successfully sieged and destroyed the town. In the former periods, only a small part ( pars ) of Pannonia, the territory of Bassianae was controlled by Constantinople as Justinian's Novellae clearly
monuments, such as the Warrior on Horse (unofficially, Alexander the Great), the Warrior monument (unofficially, Philip II of Macedonia), Tsar Samuil, Justinian I, etc.; buildings: State National Theater, Museum of Architecture, Philharmonic Hall, Ministry
-century popularity is also strongly suggested by the eleven iron and copper-alloy pieces published from Iustiniana Prima/Caričin Grad, 38 the city founded by the Emperor Justinian I (r. 527–565) in the earlier sixth century. A similar date can be assigned to the
, and the winged Victoria thus received a cross in her hands on coins of Emperor Justinian. 97 Thus, since the possibility of contemporary Christian reinterpretation regularly arises in connection with pagan mythological figures from the second half of