Roman times are known as an epoch when man subdued nature all over the \textit{orbis terrarum}, however all humans were and are still bound by certain environmental conditions, therefore in settling a special dichotomy can be observed. In my present study I am analysing the Roman settlement patterns of the North-Eastern part of Pannonia by evaluating field-walking material and results of excavations. The classification of the sites is mainly based on building material and pottery collected on the field. After examining the structure of settlements with the assistance of GIS technologies, I assess how the least cost paths calculated from the relief of terrain influenced settling
From c. the 2nd half of the 1st cent. AD to 488 AD, Noricum formed part of the Roman Empire. While p...
By employing a tailored methodology of predictive modelling, this paper uncovers factors influencing...
Pompeii, buried by the explosive A.D. 79 eruption of Somma-Vesuvius, is one of the most studied anci...
This book presents a useful GIS procedure to study settlement patterns in landscape archaeology. In ...
This paper examines settlement density and settlement patterns in the Roman colonial territories of ...
From a technical perspective, the body of late Roman documents known collectively as the Corpus Agri...
In October 2012 the workshop entitled “Reading Past and Present Landscapes in Central Europe” was he...
In general, Roman-period archaeological research in the regions north of the Roman Empire is site-ba...
The territorial organisation of rural areas in the context of the Roman Empire is a widely discussed...
The study presented here therefore represents an analysis of just one aspect of observed cultural ch...
This paper proposes a GIS quantitative method for simulating dispersed distribution of sites in a la...
One of the biggest problems archaeologists face during interpretation is the fragmented and incomple...
This paper examines the identification of rural occupation and the changing settlement pattern durin...
This paper examines the identification of rural occupation and the changing settlement pattern durin...
The present study analyses Roman-native interaction from a landscape perspective in a core territory...
From c. the 2nd half of the 1st cent. AD to 488 AD, Noricum formed part of the Roman Empire. While p...
By employing a tailored methodology of predictive modelling, this paper uncovers factors influencing...
Pompeii, buried by the explosive A.D. 79 eruption of Somma-Vesuvius, is one of the most studied anci...
This book presents a useful GIS procedure to study settlement patterns in landscape archaeology. In ...
This paper examines settlement density and settlement patterns in the Roman colonial territories of ...
From a technical perspective, the body of late Roman documents known collectively as the Corpus Agri...
In October 2012 the workshop entitled “Reading Past and Present Landscapes in Central Europe” was he...
In general, Roman-period archaeological research in the regions north of the Roman Empire is site-ba...
The territorial organisation of rural areas in the context of the Roman Empire is a widely discussed...
The study presented here therefore represents an analysis of just one aspect of observed cultural ch...
This paper proposes a GIS quantitative method for simulating dispersed distribution of sites in a la...
One of the biggest problems archaeologists face during interpretation is the fragmented and incomple...
This paper examines the identification of rural occupation and the changing settlement pattern durin...
This paper examines the identification of rural occupation and the changing settlement pattern durin...
The present study analyses Roman-native interaction from a landscape perspective in a core territory...
From c. the 2nd half of the 1st cent. AD to 488 AD, Noricum formed part of the Roman Empire. While p...
By employing a tailored methodology of predictive modelling, this paper uncovers factors influencing...
Pompeii, buried by the explosive A.D. 79 eruption of Somma-Vesuvius, is one of the most studied anci...