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La Relation de la croisade de Nicopolis est un extrait remanié, au milieu du XVe siècle dans l'espace bourguignon, du livre IV des Chroniques de Jean Froissart. Elle rapporte l'appel à l'aide du roi de Hongrie contre les Ottomans, les préparatifs des « seigneurs de France » dirigés par le jeune comte de Nevers, Jean de Bourgogne, futur duc Jean sans Peur, la marche jusqu'en Hongrie, la traversée du Danube, la pénétration dans le territoire dominé par les Turcs, la défaite de Nicopolis (25 septembre 1396), la capture des chefs français, avec des excursus sur les Visconti de Milan ou le schisme dans l'Église. Publié pour la première fois par le baron Kervyn de Lettenhove à la fin du XIXe siècle, ce texte fait ici l'objet d'une nouvelle édition critique, qui tient compte de manuscrits inconnus de l'éditeur précédent et qui comprend un riche commentaire historique. Une nouvelle étude de la tradition de l'œuvre permet aussi de révoquer en doute l'attribution, généralement admise, à un serviteur de Guy de Blois.En complément, est proposé le Mémoire du voyage de Hongrie de Prosper Bauyn, souvent cité mais inédit jusqu'à ce jour, rédigé au XVIIe siècle à partir des archives de la Chambre des comptes de Dijon, dont certaines ont disparu. --
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Excavations (Archaeology) --- Byzantine antiquities --- Nicopolis ad Istrum (Extinct city) --- Antiquities --- -Archaeological digs --- Archaeological excavations --- Digs (Archaeology) --- Excavation sites (Archaeology) --- Ruins --- Sites, Excavation (Archaeology) --- Archaeology --- Nicopolis ad Istrum (City) --- Nikopolis ad Istrum (Extinct city) --- Bulgaria --- -Nicopolis ad Istrum (Extinct city) --- Nicopolis ad Istrum (Extinct city). --- -Archaeology --- Archaeological digs --- Excavations (Archaeology) - Nicopolis ad Istrum (Extinct city) --- Nicopolis ad Istrum (Extinct city) - Antiquities
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"The city of Nicopolis (Epirus, northern Greece) was founded by Augustus to mark his victory over Mark Antony and Cleopatra in 31 BC at the nearby Battle of Actium. The city flourished during the period of the Roman empire and its civic coinage was one of the most important and most interesting of the empire. It continued in production for over 250 years from the reign of Augustus to that of Gallienus. It has many unusual features, such as the very rare silver coins produced for the emperor Antoninus Pius and his wife Faustina, and, more particularly, the long series of coins with the name and portrait of Augustus. It was originally thought that they were all produced during Augustus' reign, but it is now known that, even though their exact chronology is difficult, they were minted for most of the time that the mint was active. This new study builds on existing scholarship but establishes a new level of understanding of the mint. The author has been able to find many new specimens of the coinage, often with previously unknown designs, and has found much new important material which was previously unknown in both Italian and Greek museums. The new collection of material is incorporated in a new and well-illustrated catalogue. The catalogue is accompanied by a series of analytical chapters that place the coinage very securely in the context of our literary and archaeological knowledge of Nicopolis, and which analyse how it can contribute to our understanding of Roman provincial coinage -- its rhythm of production, its extent of circulation, its pattern of denominations and its iconography. The discussion is based on a very full understanding of the coinage and of the literature concerning other provincial coinages and will make a very lasting contribution, not just to the understanding of the coinage of Nicopolis and of ancient Achaea, but also of the problems and issues of the Roman provincial coinage more generally. (Taken from the Preface by Andrew Burnett, British Museum)"--Publisher's web site.
Coins, Roman --- Silver coins --- Monnaies romaines --- Monnaies d'argent --- Catalogs --- Catalogues --- Nikopolis (Greece : Extinct city) --- Nicopolis (Grèce : Ville ancienne) --- Nicopolis (Grèce : Ville ancienne)
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