Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-tj2md Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-18T13:33:26.777Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Dexippus and the Gothic Invasions: Interpreting the New Vienna Fragment (Codex Vindobonensis Hist. gr. 73, ff. 192v–193r)*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 August 2015

Christopher Mallan*
Affiliation:
Wadham College, Oxford
Caillan Davenport*
Affiliation:
The University of Queensland

Abstract

This article presents an English translation and analysis of a new historical fragment, probably from Dexippus’ Scythica, published by Gunther Martin and Jana Grusková in 2014. The fragment, preserved in a palimpsest in the Austrian National Library, describes a Gothic attack on Thessalonica and the subsequent preparations of the Greeks to repel the barbarian force as it moved south into Achaia. The new text provides several important details of historical, prosopographical and historiographical significance, which challenge both our existing understanding of the events in Greece during the reign of Gallienus and the reading of the main literary sources for this period. In this article we look to secure the Dexippan authorship of the fragment, identify the individuals named in the text, and date the events described in the text to the early 260s a.d.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2015. Published by The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

*

We would like to thank Professor Chris Pelling, Mr Nigel Wilson, Mr James Morwood, and the anonymous reviewers for their comments on this article and/or on the text. Any mistakes are, of course, our own responsibility. We are grateful to Dr Gunther Martin for drawing our attention to this new fragment and encouraging us to engage in this debate. It should be noted that Professor C. P. Jones has made available a translation and brief commentary of the fragment under discussion here on his academia.edu website entitled ‘The New Dexippos’, in which he reaches some of the same conclusions as we do in this paper. We thank Dr Christina Kuhn for drawing this to our attention. All dates are a.d. unless otherwise indicated. The translations are our own, except where noted.

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Adler, A. 1928–38: Sudiae Lexicon, LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Adler, W., and Tuffin, P. 2002: The Chronography of George Synkellos: A Byzantine Chronicle of Universal History from the Creation, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Alföldi, A. 1939: ‘The sources for the Gothic invasions of the years 260–270’, in Cambridge Ancient History XII, 721–3, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Alföldi, A. 1967: Studien zur Geschichte der Weltkrise des 3 Jahrh. nach Christus, DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Anderson, G. 1986: Philostratus: Biography and Belles Lettres in the Third Century A.D., LondonGoogle Scholar
Anderson, G. 2005: The Second Sophistic: A Cultural Phenomenon in the Roman Empire, LondonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ando, C. 2012: Imperial Rome AD 193 to 284: The Critical Century, EdinburghCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Armstrong, D. 1987: ‘Gallienus in Athens, 264’, Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 70, 235–58Google Scholar
Banchich, T. M. 2011: ‘Ephoros the Younger (212)’, in Worthington, I. (ed.), Brill's New Jacoby, Brill OnlineGoogle Scholar
Banchich, T. M., and Lane, E. N. 2009: The History of Zonaras: From Alexander Severus to the Death of Theodosius the Great, London and New YorkCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnes, T. D. 1970: ‘The lost Kaisergeschichte and the Latin historical tradition’, in Bonner Historia Augusta Colloquium 1968/9, Bonn, 1343Google Scholar
Barnes, T. D. 1972: ‘Some persons in the Historia Augusta’, Phoenix 26.2, 140–82CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barnes, T. D. 1978: The Sources of the Historia Augusta, BrusselsGoogle Scholar
Bernand, A. 1989: De Thèbes à Syène, ParisGoogle Scholar
Bleckmann, B. 1992: Die Reichskrise des III. Jahrhunderts in der spätantiken und byzantinischen Geschictsschreibung: Untersuchungen zu den nachdionischen Quellen der Chronik des Johannes Zonaras, MunichGoogle Scholar
Bleckmann, B. 1995: ‘Zu den Quellen der Vita Gallieni duo’, in Bonamente, G. and Paci, G. (eds), Historiae Augustae Colloquium Maceratense, Bari, 75105Google Scholar
Blockley, R. C. 1972: ‘Dexippus and Priscus and the Thucydidean account of the siege of Plataea’, Phoenix 26.1, 1827CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blockley, R. C. 1980: ‘Was the first book of Zosimus’ New History based on more than two sources?’, Byzantion 50.2, 393402Google Scholar
Blockley, R. C. (ed., trans. and comm.) 1985: The History of Menander the Guardsman, LiverpoolGoogle Scholar
Boatwright, M. T. 2000: Hadrian and the Cities of the Roman Empire, PrincetonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boissevain, U. P. (ed.) 1906: Excerpta de sententiis, BerlinGoogle Scholar
Bowersock, G. W. 1969: Greek Sophists in the Roman Empire, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Bowie, E. 2004: ‘The geography of the Second Sophistic: cultural variations’, in Borg, B. E. (ed.), Paideia: The World of the Second Sophistic, Berlin, 6583CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowie, E. 2006: ‘Philostratus [8]’, in Cancik, H. and Schneider, H. (eds), Brill's New Pauly Online, Brill OnlineGoogle Scholar
Bowie, E. 2009: ‘Philostratus: The life of a sophist’, in Bowie, E. and Elsner, J. (eds), Philostratus, Oxford, 1932Google Scholar
Brandt, H. 1996: Kommentar zur Vita Maximi et Balbini der Historia Augusta, BonnGoogle Scholar
Brandt, H. 1999: ‘Dexipp und die Geschichtsschreibung des 3. Jh. n.Chr.’, in Zimmermann, M. (ed.), Geschichtsschreibung und politischer Wandel im 3. Jh. n. Chr.: Kolloquium zu ehren von Karl-Ernst Petzold (Juni 1998) Anlässlich seines 80. Geburtstags, Stuttgart, 169–82Google Scholar
Bray, J. J. 1997: Gallienus: A Study in Reformist and Sexual Politics, Kent TownGoogle Scholar
Brown, A. R. 2008: The City of Corinth and Urbanism in Late Antique Greece, unpub. PhD dissertation, BerkeleyGoogle Scholar
Brown, A. R. 2011: ‘Banditry or catastrophe?: History, archaeology, and the barbarian raids on Roman Greece’, in Mathisen, R. W. and Shanzer, D. (eds), Romans, Barbarians and the Transformation of the Roman World, Farnham, 7996Google Scholar
Brunt, P. A. 1980: ‘On historical fragments and epitomes’, Classical Quarterly 30.2, 477–94CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burgess, R. W. 1993: The Chronicle of Hydatius, and the Consularia Constantinopolitana, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Burgess, R. W. 1995: ‘Jerome and the Kaisergeschichte’, Historia 44.3, 349–69Google Scholar
Burgess, R. W. 2002: ‘Jerome explained: an introduction to his Chronicle and a guide to its use’, Ancient History Bulletin 15, 129Google Scholar
Burgess, R. W. 2011: Chronicles, Consuls, and Coins: Historiography and History in the Later Roman Empire, FarnhamGoogle Scholar
Burton, G. P. 1979: ‘The curator rei publicae: towards a reappraisal’, Chiron 9, 465–87Google Scholar
Byrne, S. G. 2003: Roman Citizens of Athens, LeuvenGoogle Scholar
Cameron, A. 1970: Agathias, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Cameron, A. 2011: The Last Pagans of Rome, Oxford and New YorkGoogle Scholar
Camia, F. 2007: ‘I curatores rei publicae nella provincia d'Acaia’, Mélanges de l'École Française de Rome: Antiquité 119, 409–19CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cataudella, M. R. 2003: ‘Historiography in the east’, in Marasco, E. (ed.), Greek and Roman Historiography in Late Antiquity: Fourth to Sixth Century A.D., Leiden and Boston, 391447CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cherf, W. J. 1987: ‘The Roman borders between Achaia and Macedonia’, Chiron 17, 135–42Google Scholar
Cherf, W. J. 1993: ‘The Thermopylae garrison of Vita Claudii 16’, Classical Philology 88, 230–6CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christol, M. 1977: ‘La carrière de Traianus Mucianus et l'origine des protectores’, Chiron 7, 393408Google Scholar
Christol, M. 1986: Essai sur l’évolution des carrières sénatoriales dans la seconde moitié du IIIe siècle ap. J.C., ParisGoogle Scholar
Christol, M. 2006: ‘Remarques sur la carrière de L(ucius) Mummius Faustianus, consul ordinaire en 262’, L'Africa Romana 16, 1839–70Google Scholar
Davenport, C. 2013: ‘The governors of Achaia under Diocletian and Constantine’, Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 184, 225–34Google Scholar
Davenport, C., and Mallan, C. 2013: ‘Dexippus’ letter of Decius: context and interpretation’, Museum Helveticum 70, 5773Google Scholar
De Blois, L. 1976: The Policy of the Emperor Gallienus, LeidenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Blois, L. 1998: ‘Emperor and empire in the works of Greek-speaking authors of the third century A.D.’, Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.34.4, 3391–443Google Scholar
De Boor, C. 1892: ‘Römische Kaisergeschichte in byzantinischer Fassung’, Byzantinische Zeitschrift 1.1, 1333CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Boor, C. 1903: Excerpta de legationibus, pars II. Excerpta de legationibus gentium ad romanos, BerlinGoogle Scholar
De Lannoy, L. 1997: ‘Le problème des Philostrate (état de la question)’, Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.34.3, 2362–449Google Scholar
De Ste Croix, G. E. M. 1981: The Class Struggle in the Ancient Greek World, LondonGoogle Scholar
Desbordes, O., and Ratti, S. 2000: Histoire Auguste, Tome IV 2ème partie: Vies des deux Valériens et des deux Galliens, ParisGoogle Scholar
Dindorf, L. 1868–71: Ioannis Zonarae Epitome historiarum, LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Dindorf, L. 1870: Historici Graeci Minores, Vol. 1, LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Drinkwater, J. 2005: ‘Maximinus to Diocletian and the “crisis”’, in Cambridge Ancient History XII2, Cambridge, 2866CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eck, W. 1985: Die Statthalter der germanischen Provinzen vom 1.–3. Jahrhundert, CologneGoogle Scholar
Esmonde Cleary, A. S. 2013: The Roman West AD 200–500: An Archaeological Study, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Favuzzi, A. 2011: ‘Eusebios (101)’, in Worthington, I. (ed.), Brill's New Jacoby, Brill OnlineGoogle Scholar
Flinterman, J.-J. 1995: Power, Paideia and Pythagoreanism: Greek Identity, Conceptions of the Relationship between Philosophers and Monarchs, and Political Ideas in Philostratus’ Life of Apollonius, AmsterdamCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Follet, S. 1976: Athènes au IIe et au IIIe siècle. Études chronologiques et prosopographiques, ParisGoogle Scholar
Fossey, J. M. 1979: ‘The cities of the Kopaïs in the Roman period’, Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.7.1, 549–91Google Scholar
Fossey, J. M. 1986: ‘Some imperial statue bases from the South West Kopais’, in von Kalcyk, H., Gullath, B. and Graber, A. (eds), Studien zur alten Geschichte. Siegfried Lauffer zum 70. Geburtstag, Rome, 245–60Google Scholar
Fowden, G. 1988: ‘City and mountain in late Roman Attica’, Journal of Hellenic Studies 108, 4859CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frakes, R. M. 2011: ‘Philostratos of Athens (99)’, in Worthington, I. (ed.), Brill's New Jacoby, Brill OnlineGoogle Scholar
Frantz, A. 1988: Late Antiquity: A.D. 267–700. Volume XXIV, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Gerhardt, T., and Hartmann, U. 2008: ‘Fasti’, in Johne et al. 2008a, 1055–198CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gerov, B. 1965: ‘La carriera militare di Marciano generale di Gallieno’, Athenaeum 43, 333–54Google Scholar
Goltz, A., and Hartmann, U. 2008: ‘Valerianus und Gallienus’, in Johne et al. 2008a, 223–95Google Scholar
Groag, E. 1939: Die römischen Reichsbeamten von Achaia bis auf Diokletian, Vienna and LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Grusková, J. 2010: Untersuchungen zu den griechischen Palimpsesten der Österreichischen Nationalbibliothek, ViennaCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grusková, J., and Martin, G. 2014: ‘Ein neues Textstück aus den “Scythica Vindobonensia” zu den Ereignissen nach der Eroberung von Philippopolis’, Tyche 29, 2943CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harter-Uibopuu, K. 2003: ‘Kaiserkult und Kaiserverehrung in den Koina des grieschischen Mutterlandes’, in Cancik, H. and Hitzl, K. (eds), Die Praxis der Herrscherverehrung in Rom und seinen Provinzen, Tübingen, 209–31Google Scholar
Hartmann, U. 2008: ‘Die literarischen Quellen’, in Johne et al. 2008a, 19–44Google Scholar
Heil, M. 1997: ‘Panathenius, Statthalter von Griechenland’, Klio 79, 468–78CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henry, R. (ed. and trans.) 1959: Photius. Bibliothèque, ParisGoogle Scholar
Hohl, E. (ed.) 1971: Scriptores Historiae Augustae (3rd edn), LeipzigGoogle Scholar
Janiszewski, P. 2006: The Missing Link: Greek Pagan Historiography in the Second Half of the Third Century and in the Fourth Century A.D. (trans. Dzierzbicka, D.), WarsawGoogle Scholar
Janiszewski, P., Stebnicka, K., and Szabat, E. (eds) 2015: Prosopography of Greek Rhetors and Sophists of the Roman Empire (trans. Dzierzbicka, D.), OxfordGoogle Scholar
Jeffreys, E. 1990: ‘Malalas’ sources’, in Jeffreys, E., Croke, B. and Scott, R. (eds), Studies in John Malalas, Byzantina Australiensia 6, Sydney, 167216CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johne, K.-P., Hartmann, U., and Gerhardt, T. (eds) 2008a: Die Zeit der Soldatenkaiser: Krise und Transformation des römischen Reiches im 3. Jahrhundert n. Chr. (235–284), BerlinCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Johne, K.-P., and Hartmann, U. 2008b: ‘Krise und Transformation des Reiches im 3. Jahrhundert’, in Johne et al. 2008a, 1025–53CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jones, C. P. 1996: ‘The Panhellenion’, Chiron 26, 2956Google Scholar
Jones, C. P. 2011: ‘The historian Philostratus of Athens’, Classical Quarterly 61, 320–2CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kajanto, I. 1965: The Latin Cognomina, HelsinkiGoogle Scholar
Kaldellis, A. 2012: ‘The Byzantine role in the making of the corpus of Classical Greek historiography: a preliminary investigation’, Journal of Hellenic Studies 132, 7185CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kelly, G. 2008: Ammianus Marcellinus: The Allusive Historian, CambridgeGoogle Scholar
Kemezis, A. M. 2014: Greek Narratives of the Roman Empire under the Severans: Cassius Dio, Philostratus, and Herodian, CambridgeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kettenhofen, E. 1992: ‘Die Einfälle der Heruler ins Römische Reich im 3. Jh. n. Chr.’, Klio 74, 291313CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kienast, D. 2004: Römische Kaisertabelle, DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Liebeschuetz, W. 2007: ‘Was there a crisis of the third century?’, in Hekster, O., de Kleijn, G. and Slootjes, D. (eds), Crises and the Roman Empire. Proceedings of the Seventh Workshop of the International Network Impact of Empire (Nijmegen, June 20–24, 2006), Impact of Empire, Vol. 7, Leiden, 11–20CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lo Cascio, E. 2005: ‘The government and administration of the empire in the central decades of the third century’, in Cambridge Ancient History XII2, Cambridge, 156–69CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marshall, P. K. 1983: ‘Scriptores Historiae Augustae’, in Reynolds, L. D. (ed.), Texts and Transmission: A Survey of the Latin Classics, Oxford, 354–6Google Scholar
Martin, G. 2006: Dexipp von Athen. Edition, Übersetzung und begleitende Studien, TübingenGoogle Scholar
Martin, G., and Grusková, J. 2014a: ‘“Dexippus Vindobonensis”? Ein neues Handschriftenfragment zum sog. Herulereinfall der Jahre 267/8’, Wiener Studien 127, 101–20CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martin, G., and Grusková, J. 2014b: ‘“Scythica Vindobonensia” by Dexippus(?): new fragments on Decius’ Gothic wars’, Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies 54.4, 728–54Google Scholar
Mason, H. J. 1970: ‘The Roman government in Greek sources: the effect of literary theory on the translation of official titles’, Phoenix 24.2, 150–9CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mason, H. J. 1974: Greek Terms for Roman Institutions: A Lexicon and Analysis, TorontoGoogle Scholar
McInerney, J. 2011: ‘Dexippos (100)’, in Worthington, I. (ed.), Brill's New Jacoby, Brill OnlineGoogle Scholar
Mennen, I. 2011: Power and Status in the Roman Empire, A.D. 193–284, LeidenCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Meritt, B. D., and Traill, J. S. 1974: The Athenian Councillors. The Athenian Agora XV, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Millar, F. G. B. 1969: ‘P. Herennius Dexippus: the Greek world and the third-century invasions’, Journal of Roman Studies 59, 1229CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Millar, F. G. B. 2004: Rome, The Greek World, and the East. Volume 2: Government, Society, and Culture in the Roman Empire (eds Cotton, H. M. and Rogers, G. M.), Chapel HillGoogle Scholar
Mommsen, T. 1890: ‘Die Scriptores Historiae Augustae’, Hermes 25.2, 228–92Google Scholar
Mommsen, T. 1909: The Provinces of the Roman Empire (trans. Dickenson, W. P.), LondonGoogle Scholar
Müller, C. 1851: Fragmenta Historicorum Graecorum, Vol. IV, ParisGoogle Scholar
Niebuhr, B. G. 1829: Dexippi, Eunapii, Petri Patricii, Prisci, Malchi, Menandri, Historiarum quae supersunt, BonnGoogle Scholar
Norden, E. 1958: Die antike Kunstprosa: vom VI. Jahrhundert v. Chr. bis in die Zeit der Renaissance 5, DarmstadtGoogle Scholar
Oberhummer, E. 1936: ‘Thessalonike’, RE 6 A1, 143–63Google Scholar
Oliver, J. H. 1970: Marcus Aurelius: Aspects of Civic and Cultural Policy in the East, Hesperia Supplement 13, PrincetonGoogle Scholar
Oliver, J. H. 1978: ‘Panachaeans and Panhellenes’, Hesperia 47, 185–91CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paschoud, F. 1991: ‘L‘Histoire Auguste et Dexippe’, in Bonamente, G. and Duval, N. (eds), Historiae Augustae Colloquium Parisinum, Macerata, 217–69Google Scholar
Paschoud, F. 1994: ‘Nicomaque Flavien et la connexion Byzantine (Pierre le patrice et Zonaras): à propos du livre récent de Bruno Bleckmann’, Antiquité Tardive 2, 7182CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paschoud, F. 2000: Zosime: Histoire nouvelle, Tome I (2nd edn), ParisGoogle Scholar
Paschoud, F. 2011: Histoire Auguste: Tome IV 3e partie: Vies des Trente Tyrans et de Claude, ParisGoogle Scholar
Peachin, M. 1990: Roman Imperial Titulature and Chronology, A.D. 235–284, AmsterdamGoogle Scholar
Potter, D. S. 1990: Prophecy and History in the Crisis of the Roman Empire: A Historical Commentary on the Thirteenth Sibylline Oracle, OxfordCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Potter, D. S. 2011: ‘The Greek historians of imperial Rome’, in Feldherr, A. and Hardy, G. (eds), The Oxford History of Historical Writing, Oxford, 316–45Google Scholar
Ridley, R. T. 1972: ‘Zosimus the historian’, Byzantinische Zeitschrift 65.2, 277302CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Roberto, U. 2009: ‘Byzantine collections of late antique authors: some remarks on the Excerpta historica Constantiniana’, in Wallraff, M. and Mecella, L. (eds), Texte und Untersuchungen zur Geschichte der altchristlichen Literatur: Die Kestoi des Julius Africanus und ihre Überlieferung, Berlin, 7184CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schoell, M. S. F. 1824: Histoire de la littérature grecque profane, depuis son origine jusqu'à la prise de Constantinople par les Turcs, ParisGoogle Scholar
Sherk, R. K. 1957: ‘Roman imperial troops in Macedonia and Achaea’, American Journal of Philology 78, 5262CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sivan, H. 1992: ‘The historian Eusebius (of Nantes)’, Journal of Hellenic Studies 112, 158–63CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, R. E. 1979: ‘Dux, Praepositus’, Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 36, 263–78Google Scholar
Spawforth, A. J. 1999: ‘The Panhellenion again’, Chiron 29, 339–52Google Scholar
Spawforth, A. J., and Walker, S. 1985: ‘The world of the Panhellenion I: Athens and Eleusis’, Journal of Roman Studies 75, 78104CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Spawforth, A. J., and Walker, S. 1986: ‘The world of the Panhellenion II: three Dorian cities’, Journal of Roman Studies 76, 88105CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Speidel, M. P. 2008: ‘Das Heer’, in Johne et al. 2008a, 673–90Google Scholar
Stein, F. J. 1957: Dexippus et Herodianus rerum scriptores quatenus Thucydidem secuti sint, BonnGoogle Scholar
Straub, J. 1952: Studien zur Historia Augusta, BernGoogle Scholar
Syme, R. 1971: Emperors and Biography, OxfordGoogle Scholar
Talbert, R. J. A. 1984: The Senate of Imperial Rome, PrincetonCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Theocharaki, A. M. 2011: ‘The ancient circuit wall of Athens: its changing course and the phases of construction’, Hesperia 81.1, 71156CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thurn, J. (ed.) 2000: Ioannis Malalae Chronographia, BerlinGoogle Scholar
Traill, J. S. 1971: ‘Greek inscriptions honoring prytaneis’, Hesperia 40, 308–29CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Traill, J. S. 1982: ‘Prytany and ephebic inscriptions from the Athenian agora’, Hesperia 51, 197235CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Treadgold, W. 2007: The Early Byzantine Historians, BasingstokeGoogle Scholar
Treadgold, W. 2013: The Middle Byzantine Historians, BasingstokeCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wahlgren, S. (ed.) 2006: Symeonis Magistri et Logothetae Chronicon, BerlinCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilkes, J. J. 1989: ‘Civil defence in third-century Achaia’, in Walker, S. and Cameron, A. (eds), The Greek Renaissance in the Roman Empire, BICS Supplement 55, London, 187–92Google Scholar
Wilkes, J. J. 2005: ‘Provinces and frontiers’, Cambridge Ancient History XII2, Cambridge, 212–68CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, N. G. 1983: Scholars of Byzantium, LondonGoogle Scholar
Witschel, C. 1999: Krise – Rezession – Stagnation? Der western des römischen Reiches im 3. Jh. n. Chr., FrankfurtGoogle Scholar