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  2. Dalmatae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalmatae

    The tribe was subject to Celtic influences. [15] [16] One of the Dalmatian tribes was called Baridustae [17] that later was settled in Roman Dacia. Pliny the Elder also mentioned the Tariotes, and their territory Tariota, which was described as an ancient region. The Tariotes are considered part of the Delmatae. [18] [19]

  3. Dalmatia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalmatia

    The extent of the Kingdom of Dalmatia (blue) which existed within Austria-Hungary until 1918, on a map of modern-day Croatia and Montenegro. Today, Dalmatia is a historical region only, not formally instituted in Croatian law. Its exact extent is therefore uncertain and subject to public perception.

  4. Dalmatian city-states - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalmatian_city-states

    The boundaries of the eight original Dalmatian city-states were defined by the so-called Dalmatian Pale, the boundary of Roman local laws. [citation needed]Historian Johannes Lucius included Flumen (now Rijeka) and Sebenico (now Šibenik) after the year 1000, when Venice started to take control of the region, in the Dalmatian Pale.

  5. History of Dalmatia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Dalmatia

    The region was populated by Illyrian tribes around 1,000 B.C, including the Delmatae, who formed a kingdom and for whom the province is named. Later it was conquered by Rome, thus becoming the province of Dalmatia, part of the Roman Empire. Dalmatia was ravaged by barbaric tribes in the beginning of the 4th century.

  6. Dalmatian Italians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dalmatian_Italians

    Dalmatian possessions of the Republic of Venice in 1797. In 1409, during the 20-year Hungarian civil war between King Sigismund and the Neapolitan house of Anjou, the losing contender, Ladislaus of Naples, sold his claim on Dalmatia to the Venetian Republic for a meager sum of 100,000 ducats.

  7. List of noble families of Croatia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_noble_families_of...

    The family protected Croatia from the Ottoman Empire and owned large estates and palaces along the Dalmatian coast. Franić: 15th century–present Noble family from Makarska and its hinterland (southern Croatia) Frangipani Frankopan: 1116–1671 Duke Ban: Old noble family known as from the island of Krk.

  8. Tariotes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tariotes

    Those inscriptions refer to the boundaries of pastures used by the tribe of the Tariotes. [4] A passage in the Libri Coloniarum ("Book of Colonies") of the Gromatici Veteres , probably dating back to the 5th century AD, is also considered to report the name of the tribe, along with that of the Sardeates .

  9. Bellum Batonianum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bellum_Batonianum

    The Romans referred to the conflict as Bellum Batonianum ("Batonian War") after these two leaders with the same name; Velleius Paterculus called it the Pannonian and Dalmatian War because it involved both regions of Illyricum, and in English it has also been called the Great Illyrian Revolt, Pannonian–Dalmatian uprising, and Bato uprising.