Chiriac Costel
I am a scientist interested in the ancient history of Romania and the province of Dobroudja (Moesia Inferior/ Scythia Minor ) inRoman and Byzantine times....As archaeologist i deal with : glass,seals,fibulae,ceramics,inscriptions,metal objects,small finds etc.I work as a Senior researcher in INSTITUTUL DE ARHEOLOGIE from IASI ,ROMANIA.
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Papers by Chiriac Costel
and tin, which, on one face, has the image of a mounted mediaeval knight.
The legend, in Latin, reads: SЄCRЄTU(m) • PһILIPPI • FILII • COmIТIS
FLANDṚỊ(a)Є̣
In translation: “The seal of Philip, son of the Count of Flanders.”
In the opinion of the authors, this piece may be dated to the 12th-13th
centuries and it belonged to a personage of Flemish origin, with the name of
Philip. There are three possibilities of identification for the personage under
discussion. He may have been:
Philip of Alsace, Count of Flanders (1143-1191);
Philip le Noble, Marquis of Namur (1175-1212);
Philip of Courtenay (1243-1283), son of Baldwin II, the Latin emperor
of Constantinople (1240-1261).
The article discusses the political-military situations in which each of the
three personages could be present in the Balkan-Danubian area; there is
practically no possibility of a precise option for one or another of the three. The
seal-like emblem was discovered in Dobruja (village of Saraiu, county of
Constanţa), near the Danube.
and tin, which, on one face, has the image of a mounted mediaeval knight.
The legend, in Latin, reads: SЄCRЄTU(m) • PһILIPPI • FILII • COmIТIS
FLANDṚỊ(a)Є̣
In translation: “The seal of Philip, son of the Count of Flanders.”
In the opinion of the authors, this piece may be dated to the 12th-13th
centuries and it belonged to a personage of Flemish origin, with the name of Philip. There are three possibilities of identification for the personage under discussion. He may have been:
Philip of Alsace, Count of Flanders (1143-1191);
Philip le Noble, Marquis of Namur (1175-1212);
Philip of Courtenay (1243-1283), son of Baldwin II, the Latin emperor
of Constantinople (1240-1261).
The article discusses the political-military situations in which each of the
three personages could be present in the Balkan-Danubian area; there is
practically no possibility of a precise option for one or another of the three. The seal-like emblem was discovered in Dobruja (village of Saraiu, county of Constanţa), near the Danube.
an anthropological point of view by his natural and social environment. There are obvious resemblances with the burial rituals practiced in the Judaic desert.
All three glass shapes are very well known and they appear in the nearside of military centres (castra) like Ibida, Durostorum, Noviodunum and Carsium.
and tin, which, on one face, has the image of a mounted mediaeval knight.
The legend, in Latin, reads: SЄCRЄTU(m) • PһILIPPI • FILII • COmIТIS
FLANDṚỊ(a)Є̣
In translation: “The seal of Philip, son of the Count of Flanders.”
In the opinion of the authors, this piece may be dated to the 12th-13th
centuries and it belonged to a personage of Flemish origin, with the name of
Philip. There are three possibilities of identification for the personage under
discussion. He may have been:
Philip of Alsace, Count of Flanders (1143-1191);
Philip le Noble, Marquis of Namur (1175-1212);
Philip of Courtenay (1243-1283), son of Baldwin II, the Latin emperor
of Constantinople (1240-1261).
The article discusses the political-military situations in which each of the
three personages could be present in the Balkan-Danubian area; there is
practically no possibility of a precise option for one or another of the three. The
seal-like emblem was discovered in Dobruja (village of Saraiu, county of
Constanţa), near the Danube.
and tin, which, on one face, has the image of a mounted mediaeval knight.
The legend, in Latin, reads: SЄCRЄTU(m) • PһILIPPI • FILII • COmIТIS
FLANDṚỊ(a)Є̣
In translation: “The seal of Philip, son of the Count of Flanders.”
In the opinion of the authors, this piece may be dated to the 12th-13th
centuries and it belonged to a personage of Flemish origin, with the name of Philip. There are three possibilities of identification for the personage under discussion. He may have been:
Philip of Alsace, Count of Flanders (1143-1191);
Philip le Noble, Marquis of Namur (1175-1212);
Philip of Courtenay (1243-1283), son of Baldwin II, the Latin emperor
of Constantinople (1240-1261).
The article discusses the political-military situations in which each of the
three personages could be present in the Balkan-Danubian area; there is
practically no possibility of a precise option for one or another of the three. The seal-like emblem was discovered in Dobruja (village of Saraiu, county of Constanţa), near the Danube.
an anthropological point of view by his natural and social environment. There are obvious resemblances with the burial rituals practiced in the Judaic desert.
All three glass shapes are very well known and they appear in the nearside of military centres (castra) like Ibida, Durostorum, Noviodunum and Carsium.