Une inscription romaine tardive paíenne de Remesiana (Province de Dacia Mediterranea)
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My paper begins with a briefsurvey ofthe history and the archaeological remains
of the Roman settlement at Remes/ana (east Moesia Superior, later Dada
Mediterranea). Remesiana was situated on the military road that connected Naissus
and Serdica and led further to Byzantium - Constantinople. As such itfigures in
the Itinerarium Antonini and the Tabula Peutingeriana. Remesianá became an
important bishopric in the early 5th century A.D., thanks to the activities of the
famous bishop Niceta (366-414 A.D.). Indeed, lhe site itself has unearthed notable
traces of Christian life. Surprisingly enough, a late pagan inscription (a [?]zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA
funerary slab, h. 52cm, w. J 29 em, th. 3 cm) has been recently discovered at
Remesiana. 1t reads: Taurinianus ex tri /bunis et martialis sa(cerdos) / cum Iovinio
or -iano) n (bito) filio. Epigraphic features (the absence of gentilicia; the
abbreviation; n the expression ex tribunis; forms of A and L) i...ndicate a late
dating, probably in the second half of the fourth century. 011 the other hand, the
inscription must have been erected by a pagan; Taurinianus ' til/e of Mars' sacerdos
(1.2 excludes, practically speaking, the altemative of qualifying MART1ALIS as
the cognomen of another dedicatory) is eloquent, and the omission ofthe cross at
the beginning of the text points in the same direction. With regard to Taurinianus '
military post, and the "martial" nature of his sacerdotium, this does not necessari/y
imply a period during which paganism was widely tolerated. However, it is tempting
to date the new monument to the reign of Julian, during which the publication of
the pagan inscriptions was permitted again, after Constantius Il s contrary
practice.
Кључне речи:
Moesia Superior / Remesiana / Pagan Inscription / Roman settlement / archaelogical remainsИзвор:
Phoînix, 2000, 6, 346-359Издавач:
- Rio de Janeiro : Universidade federal do Rio de Janeiro
Институција/група
Балканолошки институт САНУ / Institute for Balkan Studies SASATY - JOUR AU - Petrović, Vladimir P. PY - 2000 UR - https://dais.sanu.ac.rs/123456789/15549 AB - My paper begins with a briefsurvey ofthe history and the archaeological remains of the Roman settlement at Remes/ana (east Moesia Superior, later Dada Mediterranea). Remesiana was situated on the military road that connected Naissus and Serdica and led further to Byzantium - Constantinople. As such itfigures in the Itinerarium Antonini and the Tabula Peutingeriana. Remesianá became an important bishopric in the early 5th century A.D., thanks to the activities of the famous bishop Niceta (366-414 A.D.). Indeed, lhe site itself has unearthed notable traces of Christian life. Surprisingly enough, a late pagan inscription (a [?]zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA funerary slab, h. 52cm, w. J 29 em, th. 3 cm) has been recently discovered at Remesiana. 1t reads: Taurinianus ex tri /bunis et martialis sa(cerdos) / cum Iovinio or -iano) n (bito) filio. Epigraphic features (the absence of gentilicia; the abbreviation; n the expression ex tribunis; forms of A and L) indicate a late dating, probably in the second half of the fourth century. 011 the other hand, the inscription must have been erected by a pagan; Taurinianus ' til/e of Mars' sacerdos (1.2 excludes, practically speaking, the altemative of qualifying MART1ALIS as the cognomen of another dedicatory) is eloquent, and the omission ofthe cross at the beginning of the text points in the same direction. With regard to Taurinianus ' military post, and the "martial" nature of his sacerdotium, this does not necessari/y imply a period during which paganism was widely tolerated. However, it is tempting to date the new monument to the reign of Julian, during which the publication of the pagan inscriptions was permitted again, after Constantius Il s contrary practice. PB - Rio de Janeiro : Universidade federal do Rio de Janeiro T2 - Phoînix T1 - Une inscription romaine tardive paíenne de Remesiana (Province de Dacia Mediterranea) SP - 346 EP - 359 VL - 6 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_15549 ER -
@article{ author = "Petrović, Vladimir P.", year = "2000", abstract = "My paper begins with a briefsurvey ofthe history and the archaeological remains of the Roman settlement at Remes/ana (east Moesia Superior, later Dada Mediterranea). Remesiana was situated on the military road that connected Naissus and Serdica and led further to Byzantium - Constantinople. As such itfigures in the Itinerarium Antonini and the Tabula Peutingeriana. Remesianá became an important bishopric in the early 5th century A.D., thanks to the activities of the famous bishop Niceta (366-414 A.D.). Indeed, lhe site itself has unearthed notable traces of Christian life. Surprisingly enough, a late pagan inscription (a [?]zyxwvutsrqponmlkjihgfedcbaZYXWVUTSRQPONMLKJIHGFEDCBA funerary slab, h. 52cm, w. J 29 em, th. 3 cm) has been recently discovered at Remesiana. 1t reads: Taurinianus ex tri /bunis et martialis sa(cerdos) / cum Iovinio or -iano) n (bito) filio. Epigraphic features (the absence of gentilicia; the abbreviation; n the expression ex tribunis; forms of A and L) indicate a late dating, probably in the second half of the fourth century. 011 the other hand, the inscription must have been erected by a pagan; Taurinianus ' til/e of Mars' sacerdos (1.2 excludes, practically speaking, the altemative of qualifying MART1ALIS as the cognomen of another dedicatory) is eloquent, and the omission ofthe cross at the beginning of the text points in the same direction. With regard to Taurinianus ' military post, and the "martial" nature of his sacerdotium, this does not necessari/y imply a period during which paganism was widely tolerated. However, it is tempting to date the new monument to the reign of Julian, during which the publication of the pagan inscriptions was permitted again, after Constantius Il s contrary practice.", publisher = "Rio de Janeiro : Universidade federal do Rio de Janeiro", journal = "Phoînix", title = "Une inscription romaine tardive paíenne de Remesiana (Province de Dacia Mediterranea)", pages = "346-359", volume = "6", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_15549" }
Petrović, V. P.. (2000). Une inscription romaine tardive paíenne de Remesiana (Province de Dacia Mediterranea). in Phoînix Rio de Janeiro : Universidade federal do Rio de Janeiro., 6, 346-359. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_15549
Petrović VP. Une inscription romaine tardive paíenne de Remesiana (Province de Dacia Mediterranea). in Phoînix. 2000;6:346-359. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_15549 .
Petrović, Vladimir P., "Une inscription romaine tardive paíenne de Remesiana (Province de Dacia Mediterranea)" in Phoînix, 6 (2000):346-359, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_dais_15549 .