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  1. hu.wikipedia.org › wiki › SplitSplit – Wikipédia

    Split (magyarul: Spalató, latinul: Spalatum, olaszul: Spalato) Horvátország második legnagyobb városa Split-Dalmácia megyében, Dalmácia legnagyobb városa, igazgatási és gazdasági központja, a Split-Makarskai főegyházmegye érseki székvárosa.

  2. The palace and the city of Spalatum which formed its surroundings were at times inhabited by a population as large as 8,000 to 10,000 people. Between 475 and 480, the Palace hosted Flavius Julius Nepos, the last recognised Emperor of the Western Roman Empire.

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  4. Q1663. Spalatum or Aspalathos (Greek: Ασπάλαθος ): port in Dalmatia, famous as residence of the retired emperor Diocletian, modern Split. History. Ruins of Spalatum today. s.III-II BCE: Aspalathos founded, probably as colony of Issa, which in turn was a Syracusan settlement from the fourth century BCE.

  5. History. Diocletian had ordered the construction of the heavily fortified compound near his hometown of Spalatum in preparation for his retirement on 1 May 305 AD. [1] . The site chosen was near Salona, the provincial administrative centre of Dalmatia, on the southern side of a short peninsula.

  6. Üdvözlünk. a. Wikipédiában. ! Ezt az enciklopédiát az olvasói szerkesztik. A magyar változatnak 542 444 szócikke van, ebből 1056 kiemelt. Az ABBA svéd együttest 1972-ben alapította Agnetha Fältskog, Björn Ulvaeus, Benny Andersson és Anni-Frid Lyngstad Stockholmban. Az együttes neve a tagok nevének kezdőbetűiből áll ...

  7. Spalatum (modern Split, Croatia) is an ancient settlement on the Adriatic coast most noted for the palatial residence of the emperor Diocletian. Display location accuracy buffer (s) Show place in Google Earth . Show area in GeoNames , Google Maps, or OpenStreetMap. Canonical URI for this page:

  8. Peristyle of Diocletian’s Palace. Split (Roman Spalatum) is city on the Dalmatian coast on a promontory in Kaštelanski Bay, southeast of Salona (modern Solin, Croatia). The etymology suggested by Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos from palatium (palace) is now considered incorrect—possibly, the Greek name was derived from a plant used in the ...

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