Geographic Database

Vitez (Divjak - Veliki Mošunj, zwischen, "Doci")

Canonical URI:
https://edh.ub.uni-heidelberg.de/edh/geographie/G022748 (Last Updates: 2018-06-05 , Klar)

province:
country:
Bosnia and Herzegovina
ancient find spot:
 
modern find spot:
Vitez
find spot:
Divjak - Veliki Mošunj, zwischen, "Doci"
region:
Srednjobosanski kanton
comment:
Divjak ca. 423 m - 3288846 - P PPL populated place - Bosnia and Herzegovina BA » Federation of B&H 01 - 44.16913, 17.76556
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Veliki Mošunj ca. 536 m - Mosunj Veliki,Mošunj Veliki,Veliki Mos,Veliki Mosunj,Veliki …
3188033 - P PPL populated place - Bosnia and Herzegovina BA » Federation of B&H 01
44.16317, 17.73546
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1: HD032914 : ILJug 0102 : anno 1954 inter vicos Divljak et Veliki Mosunj loco q.d. Doci rep.
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Bistue nova aufgrund der (nach Expertenmeinung verlässlichen) Stimme von Frau Sasel Kos entfernt


Neuer Pauly (Sasel Kos): Röm. municipium der Prov. Dalmatia (Tab. Peut. 6,1) im Gebiet der Daesitiates entlang des Urpanus (Vrabas) im Bergbaugebiet (Gold, Eisen) entlang der Flüsse Rama, Vrbas, Bistrica, Lašva beim h. **Bugojno*** (wohl ***nicht Zenica***, wie Patsch glaubt [ebenso ILJug, Wikipedia und Perseus] **oder Vitez** wie Wilkes meint) in Bosnien-Herzegowina. Gegr. an der Stelle einer bed. einheimischen eisenzeitlichen Siedlung evtl. durch die flavischen Kaiser (zahlreiche Flavii auch unter den Stadtmagistraten, teils Kolonisten aus den Küstengebieten, angezogen durch die Minen), während die ältere Stadt B. vetus (Tab. Peut. 5,5) bei Duvno angesetzt werden sollte (nicht bei Vavara, so Patsch u.a.). Auf das municipium B. bezügliche epigraphische Zeugnisse wurden in Fazliči, Zenica und Varvara gefunden und bezeugen ein sehr großes Territorium von B., bestätigt durch das Ersuchen des Andreas, episcopus ecclesiae Bestoensis (533 n.Chr.), den Distrikt seiner Gerichtsbarkeit zu verkleinern.




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197170 (Bistua Nova) The Barrington Atlas Directory notes: Bugojno BOS
See Further:
BAtlas 20 E5 Bistua Nova
Bojanovski 1988 155-58
ZENICA (“Bistue Nova”) Bosnia-Herzegovina, Yugoslavia.
PECS (Perseus), ZENICA (“Bistue Nova”) Bosnia-Herzegovina, Yugoslavia
=> An indigenous site on the right bank of the Bosnia river 78 km NW of Sarajevo. There are remains of a large Roman building with two inscriptions in Latin which have preserved the name of the municipium and another inscription which mentions the priest who performed the cult “urbis Romae.” Family names on other inscriptions indicate that the inhabitants received Roman citizenship under the Flavian emperors. There are ruins of a small Roman bath and a nymphaeum near the modern town. The seat of a bishop from 530 to 534, the town has the remains of an Early Christian church.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
C. Truhelka, WMBH 1 (1893) 273-78; C. Patsch, WMBH 11 (1909) 108; D. Sergejevski, GZM Sarajevo 44 (1932) 35-56; J. J. Wilkes, Dalmatia (1969); V. Paskvalin, Arheoloski Pregled (1968) 153.
Wikipedia (English) Zenica
=> The urban part of today's Zenica was formed during several specific periods which can be chronologically dated to the time of Neolithic community, Illyrian old towns ruins, Roman Municipium Bistua Nova, and the most important archaeological finding; an early Christian double basilica dating from the 2nd to 4th century, one of two that have so far been identified in Europe. Ruins of a substantial ancient settlement were found not far from Bilimišće (a suburb on the south side of the town) and close by the villages of Putovići and Tišina, with sites like a Villa Rustica, baths, pagan temples among other structures.
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Pleiades-ID:
 
TM Geo-ID:
Geonames ID:
Work Status:
completed

1 inscription(s) from this findspot

HD032914: Epitaph from Vitez (Dalmatia)

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