DOCSLIB.ORG
Explore
Sign Up
Log In
Upload
Search
Home
» Tags
» Nemetes
Nemetes
Resettlement Into Roman Territory Across the Rhine and the Danube Under the Early Empire (To the Marcomannic Wars)*
Bullard Eva 2013 MA.Pdf
The Rhine: Germany's River, Not Germany's Boundary
Caesar and Tacitus Reading Introduction to the Caesar Reading Julius Caesar Wrote Accounts of His Campaigns in Gaul to Justify His Power and Actions
Tacitus, Germania, 98 CE Tacitus Was Probably Born in 56 Or 57 CE in Northern Italy Into an Equestrian (Minor Noble) Family. He
Ethnicity and Iconography on Roman Cavalrymen Tombstones
On the Way: a Poetics of Roman Transportation
Patterns of Continuity in Geto-Dacian Foreign Policy
Were Used by the Romans and in What Contexts Frisii and Frisiavones Used Their Own Ethnic Names
La Integración Jurídico-Administrativa De Las
From Adam to Alemanni to America
Germanic Dialects
The Romanisation of the Civitas Vangionum Ralph Haeussler
Historical Review
People, Place, and Power in Tacitus' Germany
The Celts in the West. Germany and Gaul
Hudson Dissertation Final Version
L\Ic EXPLANATORY NOTES
Top View
PDF Hosted at the Radboud Repository of the Radboud University Nijmegen
The English Historical Review
Symmachus. Oration II. to Valentinian. 1 January 370. Introduction
Religion and Religious Practices of the Ancient Celts of the Iberian Peninsula Francisco Marco Simón University of Zaragoza
Lanzas Largas Y Tácticas De Los Germanos Occidentales En El Siglo I D. C. (Según La Descripción De Tácito) ; Long Spears
Celtic Genius
Representations of Space and Custom North of the Res Publica in the Historical Narratives of Polybius and Caesar
BOOK 6 Chapter 1 Caesar, Expecting for Many Reasons a Greater Commotion in Gaul, Resolves to Hold a Levy by the Means of M
The Gallic Wars by Julius Caesar Translated by W. A. Mcdevitte And
CELTO-GERMANIC Later Prehistory and Post-Proto-Indo-European Vocabulary in the North and West
The Ethnology of Germany, Part II. the Germans of Caesar. Author(S): H
The University of Chicago Win, Lose, Or Draw: Roman Provincial Administration and Resistance in the Early Principate a Dissertat