Ἁλμυρίς: Difference between revisions
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|dgtxt=(Ἁλμῠρίς) -ίδος, ἡ | |dgtxt=(Ἁλμῠρίς) -ίδος, ἡ<br /><b class="num">• Alolema(s):</b> plu. -ίδες Ar.<i>Fr</i>.131<br />[[Halmiris]], [[la Marisma]] o [[el Estero]]<br /><b class="num">1</b> otro n. de Halipedon, llanura junto al mar, cerca del Pireo <i>IG</i> 2<sup>2</sup>.2498.15 (IV a.C.), cf. en plu. Ar.l.c.<br /><b class="num">2</b> lago en la desembocadura del Danubio, quizá el actual Razim, Plin.<i>HN</i> 4.79. | ||
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|wketx=[[Halmyris]] (Ancient Greek: [[Ἁλμυρίς]]) was a Roman and Byzantine fort, settlement and naval port, located 2.5 km east of the village of Murighiol at the mouth of the Danube Delta in Romania. Its name in Roman times was probably Almyridensium. | |||
Halmyris occupied a key location in antiquity at the end of the Roman Moesian Limes frontier defensive system and is included in no less than eight important Greek and Latin sources, including the Itinerarium Antonini and Notitia Dignitatum. | |||
Halmyris served as a depot for supplies, colonisation and cultural exchange in the region for 1,100 years from the Iron Age to the Byzantine period. | |||
}} | }} |
Latest revision as of 13:45, 19 November 2024
Spanish (DGE)
(Ἁλμῠρίς) -ίδος, ἡ
• Alolema(s): plu. -ίδες Ar.Fr.131
Halmiris, la Marisma o el Estero
1 otro n. de Halipedon, llanura junto al mar, cerca del Pireo IG 22.2498.15 (IV a.C.), cf. en plu. Ar.l.c.
2 lago en la desembocadura del Danubio, quizá el actual Razim, Plin.HN 4.79.
Wikipedia EN
Halmyris (Ancient Greek: Ἁλμυρίς) was a Roman and Byzantine fort, settlement and naval port, located 2.5 km east of the village of Murighiol at the mouth of the Danube Delta in Romania. Its name in Roman times was probably Almyridensium.
Halmyris occupied a key location in antiquity at the end of the Roman Moesian Limes frontier defensive system and is included in no less than eight important Greek and Latin sources, including the Itinerarium Antonini and Notitia Dignitatum.
Halmyris served as a depot for supplies, colonisation and cultural exchange in the region for 1,100 years from the Iron Age to the Byzantine period.