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  1. Pannonia Secunda was one of the provinces of the Roman Empire. It was formed in the year 296, during the reign of emperor Diocletian. The capital of the province was Sirmium (today Sremska Mitrovica). Pannonia Secunda included parts of present-day Serbia, Croatia, and Bosnia and Herzegovina.

  2. In the 2nd century, the original Roman province was divided into two ones: Pannonia Inferior and Pannonia Superior. Subsequently, the area was subdivided into four provinces finally: Pannonia Prima, Pannonia Valeria, Pannonia Savia and Pannonia Secunda. Capital of Pannonia Secunda was Sirmium .

  3. Pannonia Superior was divided into Pannonia Prima and Pannonia Ripariensis (or Savia), and Pannonia Inferior was divided into Valeria and Pannonia Secunda. The inhabitants of Pannonia retained their own culture into the 2nd century ce, but Romanization did proceed rapidly, especially in the west.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Dec 13, 2023 · In the Roman province of Pannonia Secunda, the area from the Fruška Gora mountains to the north, and the Jerez river on the south belonged to the catchment area of Sirmium. Today, the region is thoroughly drained and cultivated except to the north, and sheep are now virtually absent.

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  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › PannoniaPannonia - Wikipedia

    Pannonia Secunda in the southeast, with its capital in Sirmium Diocletian also moved parts of today's Slovenia out of Pannonia and incorporated them in Noricum . [85] In 324 AD, Constantine I enlarged the borders of Roman Pannonia to the east, annexing the plains of what is now eastern Hungary, northern Serbia and western Romania up to the ...

  7. Feb 1, 2012 · But as Lower Pannionia seemed by this measure to be too much reduced, Constantine the Great added to it a part of Upper Pannonia, viz., the districts about the Upper Drave and Save; and Upper Pannonia was henceforth called Pannonia Prima, and Lower Pannonia, Pannonia Secunda.

  8. The city, the capital of what was now known as Pannonia Secunda, became an imperial residence during the reign of Licinius. Remains of the palace have been identified in the southeast of Sremska Mitrovica: a basilica and a hippodrome.

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