Bato Culture
   HOME
*





Bato Culture
Bato may refer to: People *Bato (Illyrian name) ** Bato (Dardanian chieftain) (fl. 206–176 BCE), chieftain of the Dardani in Illyria ** Bato (Daesitiate chieftain) (fl. 35 BCE – 9 CE), chieftain of the Daesitiates in Illyria ** Bato (Breucian chieftain) (fl. 8 CE), chieftain of the Breuci in Illyria * Bato Govedarica (1928–2006), American basketball player * István Bató (1812–1890), prominent citizen of the Hungarian city of Miskolc * Ronald dela Rosa (born 1962), nicknamed "Bato", former Director General of the Philippine National Police and now a senator Places * Bato or Vato, a small mountain town in Burma, site of a battle in the Burma Campaign * Bato, Tochigi, Japan, now part of Nakagawa Philippines * Bato, Camarines Sur * Bato, Catanduanes * Bato, Leyte * Lake Bato, Camarines Sur Other uses

* Bato, a List of Avatar: The Last Airbender characters#Other recurring characters, character from the TV series ''Avatar: The Last Airbender'' * ''Bato, Bato'', a 1984 s ...
[...More Info...]      
[...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]  


Bato (Illyrian Name)
Bato (see alternatives below) is an Illyrian language, Illyrian name. History Bato is one of the most characteristic Illyrian names. It appears both as a male (Bato, Batas, Baton, Batun) and a female (Bateia, Batuia, Batea) name. It is attested from the southern Illyrian to the northern Illyrian (Delmato-Pannonian) region. Outside Illyria, it is found among Roman Illyrians soldiers from the Balkans in Europe, the Illyrian community in Alburnus Maior (Dacia), the Iapygians, Iapygian lands of southern Italy and the wider Hellenistic Mediterranean. In the form Baton (Βάτων) it must have reached Hellenistic Greece quite early, as it is already embedded in typically local anthroponymy in that era. The female name ''Batea (mythology), Batea'' appears twice in Greek mythology: as the name of Batea of Troad, daughter of Teucer and wife of Dardanus (son of Zeus), Dardanus and as the name of a nymph who married Oebalus of Sparta. Pausanias (geographer), Pausanias (2nd century CE) men ...
[...More Info...]      
[...Related Items...]     OR:     [Wikipedia]   [Google]   [Baidu]  



MORE