4:18
Moesia by Arany Zoltán
http://www.aranyzoltan.hu/...
published: 06 Jul 2009
author: Arany Zoltán
Moesia by Arany Zoltán
Moesia by Arany Zoltán
http://www.aranyzoltan.hu/- published: 06 Jul 2009
- views: 7559
- author: Arany Zoltán
13:48
MOESIA / МИЗИЯ - част 1 от 2
Документално-музикалният филм „MOESIA-ONIS" разказва историята на мистериозната римска про...
published: 23 Jun 2011
author: Kalo Petar
MOESIA / МИЗИЯ - част 1 от 2
MOESIA / МИЗИЯ - част 1 от 2
Документално-музикалният филм „MOESIA-ONIS" разказва историята на мистериозната римска провинция Мизия, асоциирана с древната България. Мизия е в една от най...- published: 23 Jun 2011
- views: 3777
- author: Kalo Petar
10:00
SERBIA - MOESIA 2010 A.D.
Birthplace of 17 Roman Emperors and a hub or Roman Power, I can't believe it took me so lo...
published: 17 May 2010
author: Nick Pauro
SERBIA - MOESIA 2010 A.D.
SERBIA - MOESIA 2010 A.D.
Birthplace of 17 Roman Emperors and a hub or Roman Power, I can't believe it took me so long to get out here! Welcome to Serbia - which takes in the Roman Pr...- published: 17 May 2010
- views: 252
- author: Nick Pauro
2:58
ZAREK DE MOESIA (BAILANDO CON EL DIABLO)
fan video realizado por mi en tributo a uno de mis libros favoritos de la saga de los dark...
published: 09 May 2010
author: sonya alessa viudez
ZAREK DE MOESIA (BAILANDO CON EL DIABLO)
ZAREK DE MOESIA (BAILANDO CON EL DIABLO)
fan video realizado por mi en tributo a uno de mis libros favoritos de la saga de los darkhunters..."Bailando con el diablo" La cancion es Oh fortuna(carmina...- published: 09 May 2010
- views: 1412
- author: sonya alessa viudez
4:44
Zarek de Moesia - Bailando con el diablo - Sherrilyn Kenyon
El más duro de los Cazadores Oscuros acaba de llegar......
published: 14 May 2007
author: autorasenlasombra
Zarek de Moesia - Bailando con el diablo - Sherrilyn Kenyon
Zarek de Moesia - Bailando con el diablo - Sherrilyn Kenyon
El más duro de los Cazadores Oscuros acaba de llegar...- published: 14 May 2007
- views: 37493
- author: autorasenlasombra
4:07
Zarek de Moesia y Astrid
Nada para decir, acà dejo otro video que termine en esta semana, espero que les guste... u...
published: 19 Feb 2010
author: moonlightlovee
Zarek de Moesia y Astrid
Zarek de Moesia y Astrid
Nada para decir, acà dejo otro video que termine en esta semana, espero que les guste... un beso para todos! Meli.- published: 19 Feb 2010
- views: 806
- author: moonlightlovee
3:45
Zarek Of Moesia
This Is Zarek Magnus In My Book, Can't See Any One Else Playing Him....
published: 18 Apr 2009
author: Christina Bledsoe
Zarek Of Moesia
Zarek Of Moesia
This Is Zarek Magnus In My Book, Can't See Any One Else Playing Him.- published: 18 Apr 2009
- views: 6026
- author: Christina Bledsoe
33:03
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 7 - 1000 Subscribers! :D
Thank you all SO much! :DDDD....
published: 12 Feb 2013
author: TotalWarNinja
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 7 - 1000 Subscribers! :D
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 7 - 1000 Subscribers! :D
Thank you all SO much! :DDDD.- published: 12 Feb 2013
- views: 598
- author: TotalWarNinja
3:58
Astrid y Zarek de Moesia II
Video re-editado de Zarek y Astrid.. El modelo no me gusta y me parece demasiado menudito ...
published: 04 Sep 2011
author: moonlightlovee
Astrid y Zarek de Moesia II
Astrid y Zarek de Moesia II
Video re-editado de Zarek y Astrid.. El modelo no me gusta y me parece demasiado menudito para ser Z, pero bueno, a pedido de las chicas que visitan mi págin...- published: 04 Sep 2011
- views: 205
- author: moonlightlovee
3:41
Zarek of Moesia- Dance with the Devil ~ A Dark Hunter Origins Tale
ZAREK OF MOESIA A DARK HUNTER EXILED TO THE WILDS~ THIS VID A TRIBUTE TO DANCE WITH THE DE...
published: 25 Sep 2010
author: SimiDemonCharonte1
Zarek of Moesia- Dance with the Devil ~ A Dark Hunter Origins Tale
Zarek of Moesia- Dance with the Devil ~ A Dark Hunter Origins Tale
ZAREK OF MOESIA A DARK HUNTER EXILED TO THE WILDS~ THIS VID A TRIBUTE TO DANCE WITH THE DEVIL- BY SHERRILYN KENYON ALL RIGHTS OWNED BY KENYON RAINBOW IN THE ...- published: 25 Sep 2010
- views: 12189
- author: SimiDemonCharonte1
11:51
BRASIL FERNANDO JOSE MOESIA ROLIM DJ KIKITO
Dedico este vídeo a meu amigo Fernando Jose moesia Rolim Jose Moesia Rolim, espero que voc...
published: 27 Jul 2013
BRASIL FERNANDO JOSE MOESIA ROLIM DJ KIKITO
BRASIL FERNANDO JOSE MOESIA ROLIM DJ KIKITO
Dedico este vídeo a meu amigo Fernando Jose moesia Rolim Jose Moesia Rolim, espero que você goste.- published: 27 Jul 2013
- views: 20
32:20
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 9
I'm feeling better, and look forward to more videos coming up! :D....
published: 24 Feb 2013
author: TotalWarNinja
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 9
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 9
I'm feeling better, and look forward to more videos coming up! :D.- published: 24 Feb 2013
- views: 464
- author: TotalWarNinja
58:59
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 4
Tid til at forme Bulgarien. ;)...
published: 01 Feb 2013
author: TotalWarNinja
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 4
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 4
Tid til at forme Bulgarien. ;)- published: 01 Feb 2013
- views: 557
- author: TotalWarNinja
20:09
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 5
...
published: 07 Feb 2013
author: TotalWarNinja
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 5
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 5
- published: 07 Feb 2013
- views: 408
- author: TotalWarNinja
Vimeo results:
7:13
Philip I 'the Arab' - Roman Emperor 244-249 A.D. Biography and Ancient Coins
http://www.TrustedCoins.com
Marcus Julius Philippus or Philippus I Arabs (c. 204–249), kn...
published: 29 Jun 2013
author: Ilya Zlobin
Philip I 'the Arab' - Roman Emperor 244-249 A.D. Biography and Ancient Coins
http://www.TrustedCoins.com
Marcus Julius Philippus or Philippus I Arabs (c. 204–249), known in English as Philip the Arab or formerly (prior to World War II) in English as Philip the Arabian, was a Roman Emperor from 244 to 249.
Shahba, about 55 miles southeast of Damascus, in the Roman province of Syria. Philip has the nickname "the Arab" because he had family who had originated in the Arabian peninsula, believed to be distant descendants of the prestigious Baleed family of Aleppo. Philip was the son of a Julius Marinus, a local Roman citizen, possibly of some importance. Many historians[1][2][3] agree that he was of Arab descent who gained Roman citizenship through his father, a man of considerable influence. Many citizens from the provinces took Roman names upon acquiring citizenship. This makes tracing his Arabic blood line difficult. However, it is documented that Rome used the Ghassan tribe from the Azd of f Yemen as vassals to keep the neighboring northern Arabs in check.
The name of Philip's mother is unknown, but sources refer to a brother, Gaius Julius Priscus, a member of the Praetorian guard under Gordian III (238–244). In 234, Philip married Marcia Otacilia Severa, daughter of a Roman Governor. They had two children: a son named Marcus Julius Philippus Severus (Philippus II) in 238 and according to numismatic evidence they had a daughter called Julia Severa or Severina, whom the ancient Roman sources don't mention.
Philip became a member of the Pretorian Guard during the reign of the emperor Alexander Severus, who was a Syrian. In ancient Rome the Pretorian Guard was closely associated with the emperor, serving among other things as the emperor's bodyguard.
Political career
In 243, during Gordian III's campaign against Shapur I of Persia, the Praetorian prefect Timesitheus died under unclear circumstances. At the suggestion of his brother Priscus, Philip became the new Praetorian prefect, with the intention that the two brothers would control the young Emperor and rule the Roman world as unofficial regents. Following a military defeat, Gordian III died in 244 under circumstances that are still debated. While some claim that Philip conspired in his murder, other accounts (including one coming from the Persian point of view) state that Gordian died in battle. Whatever the case, Philip assumed the purple following Gordian's death. According to Edward Gibbon:
His rise from so obscure a station to the first dignities of the empire seems to prove that he was a bold and able leader. But his boldness prompted him to aspire to the throne, and his abilities were employed to supplant, not to serve, his indulgent master.
Philip was not willing to repeat the mistakes of previous claimants, and was aware that he had to return to Rome in order to secure his position with the senate. He thus travelled west, after concluding a peace treaty with Shapur I, and left his brother Priscus as extraordinary ruler of the Eastern provinces. In Rome he was confirmed Augustus, and nominated his young son Caesar and heir.
Philip's rule started with yet another Germanic incursion on the provinces of Pannonia and the Goths invaded Moesia (modern-day Serbia and Bulgaria) in the Danube frontier. They were finally defeated in the year 248, but the legions Tiberius Claudius Pacatianus was proclaimed emperor by the troops. The uprising was crushed and Philip nominated Gaius Messius Quintus Decius as governor of the province. Future events would prove this to be a mistake. Pacatianus' revolt was not the only threat to his rule: in the East, Marcus Jotapianus led another uprising in response to the oppressive rule of Priscus and the excessive taxation of the Eastern provinces. Two other usurpers, Marcus Silbannacus and Sponsianus, are reported to have started rebellions without much success.
In April A.D. 248 (April 1000 A.U.C.), Philip had the honour of leading the celebrations of the one thousandth birthday of Rome, which according to tradition was founded in 753 BC by Romulus. He combined the anniversary with the celebration of Rome's alleged tenth saeculum. According to contemporary accounts, the festivities were magnificent and included spectacular games, ludi saeculares, and theatrical presentations throughout the city. In the coliseum, more than 1,000 gladiators were killed along with hundreds of exotic animals including hippos, leopards, lions, giraffes, and one rhinoceros. The events were also celebrated in literature, with several publications, including Asinius Quadratus's History of a Thousand Yearss, specially prepared for the anniversary.
Despite the festive atmosphere, discontent in the legions was growing. Decius Verona that summer. Decius won the battle and Philip was killed sometime in September 249, either in the fighting or assassinated by his own soldiers who were eager to please the new ruler. Philip's eleven-year-old son and heir may have been killed with his father and Priscus disappeared
5:57
Theodosius I - Roman Emperor 379-395 A.D. Biography Ancient Roman Coins to Buy Certified and Guaranteed Authentic
Click link to buy authentic ancient Roman coins of Theodosius I: http://www.trustedcoins.c...
published: 04 Jul 2013
author: Ilya Zlobin
Theodosius I - Roman Emperor 379-395 A.D. Biography Ancient Roman Coins to Buy Certified and Guaranteed Authentic
Click link to buy authentic ancient Roman coins of Theodosius I: http://www.trustedcoins.com/authentic-ancient-coins-and-video-biographies/theodosiusi-authentic-ancient-roman-coins.php
Flavius Theodosius ( 11 January 347 – 17 January 395), also called Theodosius I and Theodosius the Great (Greek: Θεοδόσιος Α΄ and Θεοδόσιος ο Μέγας), was Roman Emperor from 379 to 395. Reuniting the eastern and western portions of the empire, Theodosius was the last emperor of both the Eastern and Western Roman Empire. After his death, the two parts split permanently. He is also known for making Nicene Christianity the official state religion of the Roman Empire.
Career
Theodosius was born in Cauca, in Hispania (modern day Coca, Spain) or, more probably, in or near Italica (Seville)[2], to a senior military officer, Theodosius the Elder. He accompanied his father to Britannia to help quell the Great Conspiracy in 368. He was military commander (dux) of Moesia, a Roman province on the lower Danube, in 374. However, shortly thereafter, and at about the same time as the sudden disgrace and execution of his father, Theodosius retired to Spain. The reason for his retirement, and the relationship (if any) between it and his father's death is unclear. It is possible that he was dismissed from his command by the emperor Valentinian I after the loss of two of Theodosius' legions to the Sarmatians in late 374.
The death of Valentinian I in 375 created political pandemonium. Fearing further persecution on account of his family ties, Theodosius abruptly retired to his family estates where he adapted to the life of a provincial aristocrat.
From 364 to 375, the Roman Empire was governed by two co-emperors, the brothers Valentinian I and Valens; when Valentinian died in 375, his sons, Valentinian II and Gratian, succeeded him as rulers of the Western Roman Empire. In 378, after Valens was killed in the Battle of Adrianople, Gratian appointed Theodosius to replace the fallen emperor as co-augustus for the East. Gratian was killed in a rebellion in 383, then Theodosius appointed his elder son, Arcadius, his co-ruler for the East. After the death in 392 of Valentinian II, whom Theodosius had supported against a variety of usurpations, Theodosius ruled as sole emperor, appointing his younger son Honorius Augustus as his co-ruler for the West (Milan, on 23 January 393) and defeating the usurper Eugenius on 6 September 394, at the Battle of the Frigidus (Vipava river, modern Slovenia) he restored peace.
Family
By his first wife, the probably Spanish Aelia Flaccilla Augusta, he had two sons, Arcadius and Honorius and a daughter, Aelia Pulcheria; Arcadius was his heir in the East and Honorius in the West. Both Aelia Flaccilla and Pulcheria died in 385.
His second wife (but never declared Augusta) was Galla, daughter of the emperor Valentinian I and his second wife Justina. Theodosius and Galla had a son Gratian, born in 388 who died young and a daughter Aelia Galla Placidia (392–450). Placidia was the only child who survived to adulthood and later became an Empress; a third child, John, died with his mother in childbirth in 394.
Diplomatic policy with the Goths
The Goths and their allies (Vandali, Taifalae, Bastarnae and the native Carpi) entrenched in the provinces of Dacia and eastern Pannonia Inferior consumed Theodosious' attention. The Gothic crisis was so dire that his co-Emperor Gratian relinquished control of the Illyrian provinces and retired to Trier in Gaul to let Theodosius operate without hindrance. A major weakness in the Roman position after the defeat at Adrianople was the recruiting of barbarians to fight against other barbarians. In order to reconstruct the Roman Army of the West, Theodosius needed to find able bodied soldiers and so he turned to the most capable men readily to hand: the barbarians recently settled in the Empire. This caused many difficulties in the battle against barbarians since the newly recruited fighters had little or no loyalty to Theodosius.
Theodosius was reduced to the costly expedient of shipping his recruits to Egypt and replacing them with more seasoned Romans, but there were still switches of allegiance that resulted in military setbacks. Gratian sent generals to clear the dioceses of Illyria (Pannonia and Dalmatia) of Goths, and Theodosius was able finally to enter Constantinople on 24 November 380, after two seasons in the field. The final treaties with the remaining Gothic forces, signed 3 October 382, permitted large contingents of primarily Thervingian Goths to settle along the southern Danube frontier in the province of Thrace and largely govern themselves.
The Goths now settled within the Empire had, as a result of the treaties, military obligations to fight for the Romans as a national contingent, as opposed to being fully integrated into the Roman forces.
3:48
Maximinus II Daia Roman Emperor 308-312 A.D. Biography Certified Ancient Roman Coins to Buy
http://www.TrustedCoins.com
Maximinus Daia
55th Emperor of the Roman Empire
Reign
305–308...
published: 29 Jun 2013
author: Ilya Zlobin
Maximinus II Daia Roman Emperor 308-312 A.D. Biography Certified Ancient Roman Coins to Buy
http://www.TrustedCoins.com
Maximinus Daia
55th Emperor of the Roman Empire
Reign
305–308 (as Caesar in the east, under Galerius);
310 – May 312 (as Augustus in the east, in competition withLicinius)
Full name
Gaius Galerius Valerius Maximinus Daia Augustus
Born
20 November c. 270
Birthplace
near Felix Romuliana(Gamzigrad, Serbia)
Died
August 313 (aged 42)
Predecessor
Galerius
Successor
Licinius
Maximinus II (Latin: Gaius Valerius Galerius Maximinus Daia Augustus; c. 20 November 270 – July or August 313), also known as Maximinus Daia or Maximinus Daza, was Roman Emperor from 308 to 313. He became embroiled in the Civil wars of the Tetrarchy between rival claimants for control of the empire, in which he was defeated by Licinius. A committed pagan, he engaged in one of the last persecutions of Christians.
Early career
He was born of Dacian peasant stock to the half sister of the emperor Galerius near their family lands around Felix Romuliana, a rural area then in the Danubian region of Moesia, now Eastern Serbia.
He rose to high distinction after joining the army.
In 305, his maternal uncle Galerius became the eastern Augustus and adopted Maximinus, raising him to the rank of caesar (in effect, the junior eastern Emperor), and granting him the government of Syria and Egypt.
Civil war
In 308, after the elevation of Licinius to Augustus, Maximinus and Constantine were declared filii Augustorum ("sons of the Augusti"), but Maximinus probably started styling himself after Augustus during a campaign against the Sassanids in 310. On the death of Galerius in 311, Maximinus divided the Eastern Empire between Licinius and himself. When Licinius and Constantine began to make common cause, Maximinus entered into a secret alliance with the usurper Caesar Maxentius, who controlled Italy. He came to an open rupture with Licinius in 313; he summoned an army of 70,000 men but sustained a crushing defeat at the Battle of Tzirallum in the neighbourhood of Heraclea Perinthus on April 30. He fled, first toNicomedia and afterwards to Tarsus, where he died the following August. His death was variously ascribed "to despair, to poison, and to the divine justice".
Persecution of Christians
Maximinus has a bad name in Christian annals for renewing their persecution after the publication of the Edict of Toleration by Galerius, acting in response to the demands of various urban authorities asking to expel Christians. In one rescriptreplying to a petition made by the inhabitants of Tyre, transcribed by Eusebius of Caesarea, Maximinus expounds an unusual pagan orthodoxy, explaining that it is through "the kindly care of the gods" that one could hope for good crops, health, and the peaceful sea, and that not being the case, one should blame "the destructive error of the empty vanity of those impious men [that] weighed down the whole world with shame". In one extant inscription (CIL III.12132, from Arycanda) from the cities of Lycia and Pamphylia asking for the interdiction of the Christian cult, Maximinus replied, in another inscription, by expressing his hope that "may those [...] who, after being freed from [...] those by-ways [...] rejoice [as] snatched from a grave illness".
After the victory of Constantine over Maxentius, however, Maximinus wrote to the Praetorian Prefect Sabinus that it was better to "recall our provincials to the worship of the gods rather by exhortations and flatteries".[6] Eventually, on the eve of his clash with Licinius, he accepted Galerius' edict; after being defeated by Licinius, shortly before his death at Tarsus, he issued an edict of tolerance on his own, granting Christians the rights of assembling, of building churches, and the restoration of their confiscated properties.
Eusebius on Maximinus
The Christian writer Eusebius claims that Maximinus was consumed by avarice and superstition. He also allegedly lived a highly dissolute lifestyle:
And he went to such an excess of folly and drunkenness that his mind was deranged and crazed in his carousals; and he gave commands when intoxicated of which he repented afterward when sober. He suffered no one to surpass him in debauchery and profligacy, but made himself an instructor in wickedness to those about him, both rulers and subjects. He urged on the army to live wantonly in every kind of revelry and intemperance, and encouraged the governors and generals to abuse their subjects with rapacity and covetousness, almost as if they were rulers with him.
Why need we relate the licentious, shameless deeds of the man, or enumerate the multitude with whom he committed adultery? For he could not pass through a city without continually corrupting women and ravishing virgins.
16:16
The sanctuary of the god Silvanus in Terracina, Italy
Today we speak of the shrine dedicated to the god Sylvanus which is found in Terracina nea...
published: 26 Feb 2010
author: Terracina Rialzati
The sanctuary of the god Silvanus in Terracina, Italy
Today we speak of the shrine dedicated to the god Sylvanus which is found in Terracina near the temple of Jupiter Anxur.
Located near a Roman villa has an inscription on the rock that reads: "Octavius cum pater filio Pitaino" (vision received from God).
Like other gods of woods and flocks, Silvanus is described as fond of music; the syrinx was sacred to him, and he is mentioned along with the Pans and Nymphs. Later speculators even identified Silvanus with Pan, Faunus, Inuus and Aegipan. He must have been associated with the Italian Mars, for Cato refers to him as Mars Silvanus. In the provinces outside of Italy, Silvanus was identified with numerous native gods:
* Sucellos, Sinquas and Tettus in Gaul and Germany
* Callirius, Cocidius and Vinotonus in Britain
* Calaedicus in Spain
* the Mogiae in Pannonia
* Poininus in Moesia.
The sacrifices offered to Silvanus consisted of grapes, ears of grain, milk, meat, wine and pigs.
In Cato's De Agricultura an offering to Mars Silvanus is described, to ensure the health of cattle; it is stated there that his connection with agriculture referred only to the labour performed by men, and that females were excluded from his worship. (Compare Bona Dea for a Roman deity from whose worship men were excluded.) Virgil relates that in the very earliest times the Tyrrhenian Pelasgians had dedicated a grove and a festival to Silvanus.
In works of Latin poetry and art, Silvanus always appears as an old man, but as cheerful and in love with Pomona. Virgil represents him as carrying the trunk of a cypress (Greek: δενδροφόρος), about which the following myth is told. Silvanus – or Apollo according to other versions – was in love with the youth Cyparissus, and once by accident killed a hind belonging to Cyparissus. The latter died of grief, and was metamorphosed into a cypress.
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57:17
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 3
...
published: 31 Jan 2013
author: TotalWarNinja
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 3
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 3
- published: 31 Jan 2013
- views: 448
- author: TotalWarNinja
30:09
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 13
No, we're gonna work our way down there....
published: 08 Mar 2013
author: TotalWarNinja
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 13
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 13
No, we're gonna work our way down there.- published: 08 Mar 2013
- views: 307
- author: TotalWarNinja
62:22
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 2
Power to the people!...
published: 30 Jan 2013
author: TotalWarNinja
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 2
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 2
Power to the people!- published: 30 Jan 2013
- views: 546
- author: TotalWarNinja
23:05
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 6
...
published: 08 Feb 2013
author: TotalWarNinja
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 6
Let's Play Crusader Kings 2 - Moesia - Part 6
- published: 08 Feb 2013
- views: 517
- author: TotalWarNinja