The Early Roman Empire in the WestOxbow Books, 31. des. 2016 - 250 sider Digital reprint of this important collection of papers which form the companion to ' Early Roman Empire in the East' (Oxbow 1997) . Fourteen contributions examine the interaction of Roman and native peoples in the formative years of the Roman provinces in Italy, Gaul, Spain and Portugal, Germany and Britain. Contents: Introduction ( Thomas Blagg and Martin Millett ); The creation of provincial landscape: the Roman impact on Cisalpine Gaul ( Nicholas Purcell ); Romanization: a point of view ( Richard Reece ); Romanization: historical issues and archaeological interpretation ( Martin Millett ); The romanization of Belgic Gaul ( Colin Haselgrove ); Lower Germany: proto-urban settlement developments and the integration of native society ( J. H. F. Bloemers ); Relations between Roman occupation and the Limesvorland in the province of Germania Inferior ( Jurgen Kunow ); Early Roman military installations and Ubian settlements in the Lower Rhine ( Michael Gechter ); Some observations on acculturation process at the edge of the Roman world ( S. D. Trow ); Processes in the development of the coastal communities of Hispania Citerior in the Republican period ( Simon Keay ); Romanization and urban development in Lusitania ( Jonathan Edmondson ); Urban munificence and the growth of urban consciousness in Roman Spain ( Nicola Mackie ); First-century Roman houses in Gaul and Britain ( T. F. C. Blagg ); Towards an assessment of the economic and social consequences of the Roman conquest of Gaul ( J. F. Drinkwater ); The emergence of Romano-Celtic religion ( Anthony King ). |
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... Rome was expressed in relation to the landscape of the world. Rome's empire remained 'cellular' until at least the third century AD – a great mass of individual units whose only common matrix was relationship to Rome, though that could ...
... Rome was expressed in relation to the landscape of the world. Rome's empire remained 'cellular' until at least the third century AD – a great mass of individual units whose only common matrix was relationship to Rome, though that could ...
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... Rome's boundaries were changing, not in place only, but in kind, constantly; too simple a notion of frontiers obscures how Rome actually developed new types of edge to the areas of her concerns over the centuries.11 For the Romans of ...
... Rome's boundaries were changing, not in place only, but in kind, constantly; too simple a notion of frontiers obscures how Rome actually developed new types of edge to the areas of her concerns over the centuries.11 For the Romans of ...
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... Rome, Roman Cisalpina a protrusion of Roman influence linked with Rome umbilically. While the umbilical metaphor ... Rome's on the the whole of northern Italy. The same idea is strikingly expressed later in the language of the trophy ...
... Rome, Roman Cisalpina a protrusion of Roman influence linked with Rome umbilically. While the umbilical metaphor ... Rome's on the the whole of northern Italy. The same idea is strikingly expressed later in the language of the trophy ...
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... Rome's earliest coherent street, the Sacred Way, coincides with the view from the augurs' observation post on the Capitol towards the distant Mons Albanus (Coarelli 1983, 97-118). The same technical terms refer to divisions of the space ...
... Rome's earliest coherent street, the Sacred Way, coincides with the view from the augurs' observation post on the Capitol towards the distant Mons Albanus (Coarelli 1983, 97-118). The same technical terms refer to divisions of the space ...
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... Rome; they are irrecoverable, but no doubt are the usual casual, haphazard net of responses to complex needs, fluid ... Rome's first great long-distance road through the heart of the area (compare the use of the new system at Tarracina ...
... Rome; they are irrecoverable, but no doubt are the usual casual, haphazard net of responses to complex needs, fluid ... Rome's first great long-distance road through the heart of the area (compare the use of the new system at Tarracina ...
Innhold
plura consilio quam vi Protourban | |
Relations between Roman occupation and the Limesvorland | |
Early Roman military installations and Ubian settlements | |
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The Early Roman Empire in the West T. F. C. Blagg,Martin Millett Ingen forhåndsvisning tilgjengelig - 1990 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
1st century administrative agriculture Alarcão Alvárez Martinez amphorae Archaeol archaeological evidence architecture Arqueologia Augustan Augustus Baetulo Barcelona Batavian Belgic Gaul Blagg Bloemers Britain building Caesar central centre Cisalpina Cisalpine Gaul Citerior civitas coinage colonies communities Condé-sur-Suippe Conimbriga cult cultural Drinkwater 1983 economic élite Emerita Emporion example excavations Gallia Belgica Gallic Gallo-Roman Gaulish Gechter Germania Germania Inferior Greek groups Haselgrove Hispania Hispania Citerior houses Iberian settlement important inscriptions Italy La Tène landscape late Iron Age later Limesvorland London Lusitania Mediterranean Mérida military Millett monumental native occupation oppida Oxford political population pottery pre-conquest proto-urban province region religious Rhine river Roman Britain Roman conquest Roman Empire Roman imperialism Roman town Romano-British Rome Rome’s rural second century BC social society southern Spain status Strabo structures suggests Tacitus Tarraco temple Tène territory tribes Ubii urban munificence Vertet Verulamium villa Wightman zone