Romans, Barbarians, and the Transformation of the Roman World
Cultural Interaction and the Creation of Identity in Late Antiquity
Herausgeber: Shanzer, Danuta; Mathisen, Ralph W.
Romans, Barbarians, and the Transformation of the Roman World
Cultural Interaction and the Creation of Identity in Late Antiquity
Herausgeber: Shanzer, Danuta; Mathisen, Ralph W.
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One of the most significant transformations of the Roman world between the fourth and seventh centuries C.E. was the integration and impact of barbarian peoples into the social, cultural, religious and political Mediterranean world. This was the theme of the 2005 Shifting Frontiers in Late Antiquity Conference at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The selection of conferences papers published here remind us that the transformation of the Roman world took place in a Roman context and that Romanitas always was the touchstone against which social, intellectual, and political developments were measured.…mehr
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 398
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. September 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 155mm x 233mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 592g
- ISBN-13: 9781138270558
- ISBN-10: 1138270555
- Artikelnr.: 57047049
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 398
- Erscheinungstermin: 9. September 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 155mm x 233mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 592g
- ISBN-13: 9781138270558
- ISBN-10: 1138270555
- Artikelnr.: 57047049
Barbarians; B: Literary Constructions of Barbarian Identity; 1: Catalogues
of Barbarians in Late Antiquity 1; 2: Augustine and the Merciful Barbarians
1; 3: Reguli in the Roman Empire, Late Antiquity, and the Early Medieval
Germanic Kingdoms; 4: Were the Sasanians Barbarians? Roman Writers on the
"Empire of the Persians"; 5: A Roman Image of the "Barbarian" Sasanians 1;
B: Political and Religious Interpretations of Barbarian Activities; 6:
Banditry or Catastrophe?: History, Archaeology, and Barbarian Raids on
Roman Greece 1; 7: John Rufus, Timothy Aelurus, and the Fall of the Western
Roman Empire; C: Imperial Manipulation of Perceptions of Barbarians; 8:
Imperial Religious Unification Policy and its Divisive Consequences:
Diocletian, the Jews, and the Samaritans; 9: Hellenes, Barbarians, and
Christians: Religion and Identity Politics in Diocletian's Rome; 10:
Barbarians as Spectacle: The Account of an Ancient Embedded Reporter (Symm.
Or. 2.10-12); II: Cultural Interaction on the Roman/Barbarian Frontiers; A:
Becoming Roman: Movements of People across the Frontier and the Effects of
Imperial Policies; 11: The ius colonatus as a Model for the Settlement of
Barbarian Prisoners-of-War in the Late Roman Empire?; 12: Spies Like Us:
Treason and Identity in the Late Roman Empire; 13: The "Runaway" Avars and
Late Antique Diplomacy; B: Becoming Roman: Social and Economic Interchange;
14: Captivity and Romano-Barbarian Interchange; 15: Barbarian Raiders and
Barbarian Peasants: Models of Ideological and Economic Integration; C: A
New Era of Accommodation; 16: Kush and Rome on the Egyptian Southern
Frontier: Where Barbarians Worshipped as Romans and Romans Worshipped as
Barbarians 1; 17: Petra and the Saracens: New Evidence from a Recently
Discovered Epigram; 18: Elusive Places: A Chorological 1 Approach to
Identity and Territory in Scythia Minor (Second-Seventh Centuries); 19:
Barbarian Traffic, Demon Oaths, and Christian Scruples (Aug. Epist. 46-47);
III: Creating Identity in the Post-Roman World; 20: Visigothic Settlement,
Hospitalitas, and Army Payment Reconsidered; 21: Building an Ethnic
Identity for a New Gothic and Roman Nobility: Códoba, 615 AD; 22: Vascones
and Visigoths: Creation and Transformation of Identity in Northern Spain in
Late Antiquity; 23: Identity and Ethnicity during the Era of Migrations and
Barbarian Kingdoms in the Light of Archaeology in Gaul 1; 24: Text,
Artifact, and Genome: The Disputed Nature of the Anglo-Saxon Migration into
Britain; IV: Epilogue: Modern Constructions of Barbarian Identity; 25:
Auguste Moutié, Pioneer of Merovingian Archaeology, and the Spurlock
Merovingian Collection at the University of Illinois
Barbarians; B: Literary Constructions of Barbarian Identity; 1: Catalogues
of Barbarians in Late Antiquity 1; 2: Augustine and the Merciful Barbarians
1; 3: Reguli in the Roman Empire, Late Antiquity, and the Early Medieval
Germanic Kingdoms; 4: Were the Sasanians Barbarians? Roman Writers on the
"Empire of the Persians"; 5: A Roman Image of the "Barbarian" Sasanians 1;
B: Political and Religious Interpretations of Barbarian Activities; 6:
Banditry or Catastrophe?: History, Archaeology, and Barbarian Raids on
Roman Greece 1; 7: John Rufus, Timothy Aelurus, and the Fall of the Western
Roman Empire; C: Imperial Manipulation of Perceptions of Barbarians; 8:
Imperial Religious Unification Policy and its Divisive Consequences:
Diocletian, the Jews, and the Samaritans; 9: Hellenes, Barbarians, and
Christians: Religion and Identity Politics in Diocletian's Rome; 10:
Barbarians as Spectacle: The Account of an Ancient Embedded Reporter (Symm.
Or. 2.10-12); II: Cultural Interaction on the Roman/Barbarian Frontiers; A:
Becoming Roman: Movements of People across the Frontier and the Effects of
Imperial Policies; 11: The ius colonatus as a Model for the Settlement of
Barbarian Prisoners-of-War in the Late Roman Empire?; 12: Spies Like Us:
Treason and Identity in the Late Roman Empire; 13: The "Runaway" Avars and
Late Antique Diplomacy; B: Becoming Roman: Social and Economic Interchange;
14: Captivity and Romano-Barbarian Interchange; 15: Barbarian Raiders and
Barbarian Peasants: Models of Ideological and Economic Integration; C: A
New Era of Accommodation; 16: Kush and Rome on the Egyptian Southern
Frontier: Where Barbarians Worshipped as Romans and Romans Worshipped as
Barbarians 1; 17: Petra and the Saracens: New Evidence from a Recently
Discovered Epigram; 18: Elusive Places: A Chorological 1 Approach to
Identity and Territory in Scythia Minor (Second-Seventh Centuries); 19:
Barbarian Traffic, Demon Oaths, and Christian Scruples (Aug. Epist. 46-47);
III: Creating Identity in the Post-Roman World; 20: Visigothic Settlement,
Hospitalitas, and Army Payment Reconsidered; 21: Building an Ethnic
Identity for a New Gothic and Roman Nobility: Códoba, 615 AD; 22: Vascones
and Visigoths: Creation and Transformation of Identity in Northern Spain in
Late Antiquity; 23: Identity and Ethnicity during the Era of Migrations and
Barbarian Kingdoms in the Light of Archaeology in Gaul 1; 24: Text,
Artifact, and Genome: The Disputed Nature of the Anglo-Saxon Migration into
Britain; IV: Epilogue: Modern Constructions of Barbarian Identity; 25:
Auguste Moutié, Pioneer of Merovingian Archaeology, and the Spurlock
Merovingian Collection at the University of Illinois