Javascript must be enabled to continue!
A new inscription from Sirmium and the basilica of St. Anastasia
View through CrossRef
A fragmentary marble inscription, preserved in the Museum of Srem in Sremska Mitrovica, seems to mention the basilica of St. Anastasia: [In dom]o beati[ssimae dominae nost]re Anast[asiae. This monument provides epigraphic evidence on the cult place of the martyr in Sirmium, already recorded by written sources. According to the Passion of St. Demetrius, the church of St. Anastasia had already existed in Sirmium when Leontius, praetorian prefect of Illyricum, started the construction of the basilica of St. Demetrius. Although the find spot of the plate is not known, the finds of Ostrogothic coins next to the northern city wall imply that the basilica of St. Anastasia was located in that zone of the city, as the Ostrogoths highly respected the Martyr. It is possible that it should be identified with a martyrium leaning against the northern city wall that had been unearthed and then destroyed at the end of the 19th century.
Title: A new inscription from Sirmium and the basilica of St. Anastasia
Description:
A fragmentary marble inscription, preserved in the Museum of Srem in Sremska Mitrovica, seems to mention the basilica of St.
Anastasia: [In dom]o beati[ssimae dominae nost]re Anast[asiae.
This monument provides epigraphic evidence on the cult place of the martyr in Sirmium, already recorded by written sources.
According to the Passion of St.
Demetrius, the church of St.
Anastasia had already existed in Sirmium when Leontius, praetorian prefect of Illyricum, started the construction of the basilica of St.
Demetrius.
Although the find spot of the plate is not known, the finds of Ostrogothic coins next to the northern city wall imply that the basilica of St.
Anastasia was located in that zone of the city, as the Ostrogoths highly respected the Martyr.
It is possible that it should be identified with a martyrium leaning against the northern city wall that had been unearthed and then destroyed at the end of the 19th century.
Related Results
Roman sarcophagus from Titel
Roman sarcophagus from Titel
The unusual Roman sarcophagus of green volcaniclastic rock that was found in
Titel, a small town in Vojvodina (SRB), and is now kept in the Muzeul
National al Banatului, in T...
Bias Gender Pemberitaan Kasus Gisella Anastasia di Okezone.com
Bias Gender Pemberitaan Kasus Gisella Anastasia di Okezone.com
Gender bias against women is still common in media coverage. The news of Gisella Anastasia's arrest because of pornographic video news was quite busy being discussed in online med...
The Church Basilica
The Church Basilica
The debate over whether the early church basilica was “imperial” is bound up with many other questions, including the origins of the building type, and whether building types have ...
Two epigraphic-historical notes
Two epigraphic-historical notes
Recently a monograph appeared dealing with Roman epigraphical monuments from the West-Serbian town of Cacak and its neighbourhood (S. Ferjancic / G. Jeremic / A. Gojgic, Roman Epig...
Trends in Total Anglers’ Catches At the Croatian Section of the Sava River Basin
Trends in Total Anglers’ Catches At the Croatian Section of the Sava River Basin
Abstract
The aim of this research is to analyse trends of anglers’ total catches of the most important fish species caught by angling in different parts of the Sava ...
La nécropole de la basilique urbaine à Sirmium
La nécropole de la basilique urbaine à Sirmium
L?analyse des n?cropoles situ?e ? l?int?rieur et autour de la basilique
urbaine, sur les sites 59, 46 et 47 de Sirmium, o? 28 enterrements ont ?t?
enregistr?s jusqu?? aujourd...
Late Antique Knossos. Understanding the city: evidence of mosaics and religious architecture
Late Antique Knossos. Understanding the city: evidence of mosaics and religious architecture
Interpretation of the historical and epigraphical data can only provide a bare outline of the political and social environment of Knossos between the 5th and 7th centuries AD. Cons...
Darius and the Bisotun Inscription: A New Interpretation of the Last Paragraph of Column IV
Darius and the Bisotun Inscription: A New Interpretation of the Last Paragraph of Column IV
AbstractThe last paragraph (lines 88-92) of Col. IV of the Old Persian version of the Bisotun inscription is one of the most difficult passages in this great inscription. In it, Da...

