[3] The term Illyria or Illyricum comprises far more than the modern or even Roman Dalmatia, and corresponds roughly to the whole eastern shore of the Adriatic as far as Dyrrhachium, with a hinterland extending to Hungary.
[4] Their name is connected with the town of Dalmium or Deminium, said by some to have been in the interior, by others on the site of the modern Almissa (formerly called Dalmisia).
[5] Called the “Dalmatian Pompeii.”
[6] Quoted in Handelsstrassen und Bergwerke von Serbien und Bosnien während des Mittelalters, by Dr. C. J. Jireček, Prag, 1879, p. 3.
[7] Cap. xxix. to xxxvi.
[8] Jireček, op. cit., p. 4, note.
[9] Jireček, Wlachen und Maurowlachen. They are now called Morlacchi in Northern Dalmatia.
[10] Jireček, Handelsstrassen, pp. 22-25.
[11] Ibid., pp. 25-27.
[12] Jireček, Handelsstrassen, pp. 27-35.