This page is a stub. It will be expanded to a full-fledged article.
Spalatum (Split)
Q1663Spalatum or Aspalathos (Greek: Ασπάλαθος): port in Dalmatia, famous as residence of the retired emperor Diocletian, modern Split.
History
-
Ruins of Spalatum today - Rome's Illyrian Wars (229-228, 220-219, 168-167 BCE) brought Aspalathos into the Roman zone of influence; the Romans converted nearby Salona into the capital of their new province of Dalmatia
- In 305 CE, the emperor Diocletian, who had been shared the empire with Maximian, retired to a fortified palace he had built (in 293) in what was by now known as Spalatum.
-
Model of Diocletian's palace - After Diocletian's death in 311, the palace was no longer used, but one of the last West-Roman emperors, Julius Nepos, lived here until 480
- 493: The area becomes Ostrogothic
- 536: The area becomes part of the Byzantine Empire
- 639: Salona sacked by the Avars; many people flee to Spalatum