Storia della Scozia (I secolo-IV secolo) (Italian Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Storia della Scozia (I secolo-IV secolo)" in Italian language version.

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ahds.ac.uk

ads.ahds.ac.uk

ancientlibrary.com

  • Although "Taus" is usually interpreted as referring to the River Tay/Firth of Tay, it has been suggested it was the Solway Firth. It cannot be the latter if Agricola was already campaigning much further north and Cerialis had previously reached the Gask Ridge.
    Schmitz, Leonhard "Agraulos". in Smith, William Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (1867) Boston. Little, Brown and Company, volume 1, pp. 75–76; retrieved 26 July 2008.

antoninewall.org

  • "History"., antoninewall.org; retrieved 25 July 2008.

archive.org

  • Aristotele o Pseudo-Aristotele, On the Cosmos, 393b12, in On Sophistical Refutations. On Coming-to-be and Passing Away. On the Cosmos., translated by E. S. Forster and D. J. Furley, Harvard University Press, 1955, pp.  360.–61.
    «in greco antico: "... ἐν τούτῳ γε μὴν νῆσοι μέγιστοι τυνχάνουσιν οὖσαι δύο, Βρεττανικαὶ λεγόμεναι, Ἀλβίων καὶ Ἰέρνη..."?, ... en toútōi ge mēn nēsoi mēgistoi tynkhánousin oúsai dúo, Brettanikaì legómenai, Albíōn kaì Iérnē..., "... there are two very large islands in it called the Britannic Islands, Albion and Hibernia..."»
  • Richard Fletcher, Who's Who in Roman Britain and Anglo-Saxon England, Shepheard-Walwyn, 1989, p. 19, ISBN 0-85683-089-5.

bbc.co.uk

ceantar.org

  • The Britons in the south knew the Picts as Prydyn. Old Irish cruth and Welsh pryd are the Q- and P-Celtic forms respectively of a word meaning "form" or "shape". See MacBain's Dictionary.; retrieved 26 December 2008.

emersonkent.com

english-heritage.org.uk

heritagedaily.com

megalithic.co.uk

scarf.scot

  • Scottish Archaeological Research Framework ( ScARF.), National Framework, Roman. (accessed May 2022).
  • Scottish Archaeological Research Framework ( ScARF.), Highland Framework, Iron Age. (accessed May 2022).

scotsman.com

scottishheritagehub.com

siliconglen.com

  • The nature of the relationship between the Picts and the Caledonians is obscure. There are 3rd- and 4th-century Roman references to Picti and Caledonii and Ammianus Marcellinus states that the Picts consisted of the tribes of the Dicalydonae and the Verturiones. The idea that the Picts were heirs to the Caledonians would appear to be a convenient simplification of a complex flux of relationships. See for example Moffat (2005) p. 297 or "The Picts". (Siliconglen.com; retrieved 8 February 2009) for a more informal overview.

theromangaskproject.org

uchicago.edu

penelope.uchicago.edu

unesco.org

whc.unesco.org

web.archive.org

wikisource.org

en.wikisource.org

  • Tacitus, Agricola 29. Wikisource.