Juliana | Juliana of Nassau-Dillenburg | Juliana Rotich | Juliana of Stolberg | Juliana Chen | St. Juliana's Abbey | Lady Juliana (ship) | Lady Juliana | Juliana Spahr | Juliana Snapper | Rosa Juliana Sánchez de Tagle | Juliana (poem) | Juliana Pegues | Juliana Paes | Juliana Kanyomozi | Juliana (disambiguation) | Juliana Buhring |
The manuscript was created in about 515 and was made for the Byzantine princess Juliana Anicia, the daughter of Emperor Anicius Olybrius.
Juliana's name is attached to the Vienna Dioscurides, also known as the Juliana Anicia Codex, one of the earliest and most lavish illuminated manuscripts still in existence.