
doi: 10.14795/j.v7i2.522
The study of Roman Dacia in the last two centuries produced thousands of articles, studies, monographs and proceedings and revealed at least 3800 archaeological sites from the short period of existence of the province between 106-270 AD. The large quantity of material evidence – epigraphic, figurative, ceramic, architectural and numismatic – is constantly growing due to the numerous rescue excavations in the last two decades. The emergence of digital humanities and the possibilities of digital era created new perspectives in cataloguing, collecting and presenting archaeological big data. The article presents some of the major results of digital humanities focusing on the digitization of the materiality of Roman Dacia.
digital humanities, roman dacia, roman religion, sanctuaries, danubian provinces, Archaeology, CC1-960, Ancient history, D51-90
digital humanities, roman dacia, roman religion, sanctuaries, danubian provinces, Archaeology, CC1-960, Ancient history, D51-90
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