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EN
The constantly discussed question of Hunnic expansion into Central Europe and provincial Danube region is a topic of the study. Unlike former catastrophic conceptions, which linked Hunnic expansion with definitive break up of Danubian provinces sometimes at the turn of the 4th and 5th centuries, historical and archaeological sciences gradually has come to a more optimistic and differentiated view on development in the Danube region in the historical period under study. Based on some specificities of archaeological and anthropological finds, grave assemblages in particular, that in addition to horseman-nomadic and Hunnic elements prove also remarkable influence of the late ancient milieu in its equipment, these studies make an attempt to define the oldest horizon of finds evidencing Hunnic presence as soon as in the early 5th century. This group of archaeological monuments with Hunnic foederati as their probable bearers that settled the provinces from the terminating 4th century have to be distinguished from a complex of barbarian finds dated to the period of the Hunnic Empire flowering with typical posthumous sacrifices and isolated graves and also from already numerous grave finds left by populations that had lived within the Empire of Attila limits.
Študijné zvesti
|
2017
|
issue 61
149 - 188
EN
The paper is devoted to the body of archaeological evidence relating to the Roman military presence at the time of Marcomannic Wars in the area north to the Danube and in Moravia (Czech Republic). It provides a summary of new information during the successive grant projects in the past twenty years. Special attention has been paid to the results of the long term excavations of the Roman fort at Mušov nearby Mikulov and it its neighbourhood. Furthermore the paper tries for a reappraisal of the dating and significant of the well-known princely grave discovered in the eighties of the past century in the vicinity of Roman fort and reveals new views on the problem of the aftermath of the wars and its chronology.
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