Paperback ISBN: 9789464262810 | Hardback ISBN: 9789464262827 | Imprint: Sidestone Press | Format: 210x280mm | 458 pp. | Language: English | 22 illus. (bw) | 161 illus. (fc) | Keywords: archaeology; Roman Empire; Roman frontiers; limes; Roman army; childhood; propaganda; childhood; everyday life; mobility; military societies; religious convictions; funerary archaeology | download cover | DOI: 10.59641/1b090en
This publication – Living and Dying on the Roman Frontiers and Beyond – is the third volume of the LIMES XXV’s congress proceedings and deals with a variety of themes, including the iconography of victory; aspects of frontier societies; mobility and the place of children; funerary archaeology; the significance of Roman imports beyond the frontiers. The proceedings are mostly arranged around the original sessions, creating coherent thematical collections that make the vast output more accessible to generalists and specialists alike.
Frontiers are zones, or lines, of contact and coercion, of exchange and exclusion. As such they often express some of the most typical elements of the socio-political spaces that are defined by them. Spanning some 6,000 km along rivers, mountain ranges, artificial barriers and fringes of semi-desert, the frontiers of the Roman empire offer a wide variety of avenues and topics for a very diverse community of scholars. They are the central subject of the International Congress of Roman Frontier Studies (or just Limes Congress after the Latin word for ‘border’), organised every three years since 1949. This four-volume publication contains most of the papers presented at the 25th edition which was hosted by the municipality of Nijmegen in August 2022.
Preface
Part 1. Tales of Glory. Narratives of Roman Victory
Narratives of Roman victory between Imperial propaganda and war crimes
Martina Meyr and Christof FlügelDas sogenannte Ubiermonument in Köln. Versuch einer Deutung
Tilmann BechertCommemorating the dead in ancient Rome and modern Europe
David J. BreezeThe Vynen monument and commemorating a greater victory. Flavian propaganda and reconstruction along the limes
Michael den HartogVisions of victory in Roman Dacia
Monica GuiMere propaganda? Victoria and Mars representations and inscriptions on the Upper German-Raetian Limes
Martin KemkesLe programme iconographique peint de Deir el-Atrash. Contrôle romain, protection et présence militaire dans le désert Oriental
Julie Marchand and Joachim Le BominMy face and the wolf song. A Roman facemask and a ‘draco’ from Carnuntum
Eva SteigbergerRömische Staats- und Siegesdenkmäler in den Provinzen
Kai M. TöpferPart 2. Home away from home. Roman frontiers as movers and mixers of people
Evidence for child migration at Vindolanda on the northern frontier of Roman Britain. An osteobiography of a clandestine burial
Trudi J. BuckI am going on a trip, what am I going to pack? A comparative approach to the pottery of Batavians at home and abroad
Cristina Crizbasan and Roderick C.A. GeertsMainz-Mogontiacum, ein ethnischer Schmelzpunkt an der Rheingrenze des Imperium Romanum im 1. Jahrhundert n. Chr.
Michael Johannes KleinSoldiers, slaves, priests, administrative servants(?). Persons with Greek/oriental names in Rhaetia
Julia KopfChallenges for auxilia veterans in going home
Jared H. KreinerEx toto Orbe Romano. Ethnical diversity at the western frontier of Roman Dacia
Eduard NemethPart 3. Childhood on the Roman frontiers
Gendered futures. Children’s lives remembered on Rome’s northern frontiers
Maureen CarrollVulnerable victims. ‘Barbarian’ captive children in Roman Imperial conflict iconography
Kelsey Shawn MaddenOnomastics, children and identity on Roman military diplomas
Alexander Meyer and Elizabeth M. GreenePart 4. Everyday life in the vicinity of the forts
Introduction to the session ‘The military vicus. Everyday life in the vicinity of the forts’
Julia P. Chorus and Monica K. DüttingIn the hinterland of the Roman fortress at Novae. A new contribution to the rural settlement pattern in Moesia inferior
Petya A. AndreevaThe prison in the fortress of Apulum (Alba Iulia)
George CupceaLeisure facilities in the Tingitanian frontier. The baths in the roman castellum of Tamuda (Tetouan, Morocco)
José A. Expósito, Darío Bernal-Casasola and Tarik MoujoudThe integration of public baths into post-military colonia and civitas capitals in Roman Britain
Amanda A. HardmanFrom Caesar to Late Antiquity. Roman settlement in the vicinity of the Hermeskeil fortress
Sabine Hornung, Lars Blöck, Marvin Seferi, Patrick Mertl and Arno BraunSpuma Batava. Experimental research into a Germanic fad in 1st century Rome
Hans D.J. Huisman and Dorothee M. OlthofOne thing leads to another. Settlement development in the Stein-Lauriacum/Enns region (Austria)
Barbara Kainrath and Eva ThysellThe Arnsburg tumulus and the imagined underworld. Bathing and hunting in the meadows of the river Wetter
Julia M. KochFrom Imperial guardians to local patriots. The defenders of Novae (Moesia inferior) in Late Antiquity and their relationship to state, church and neighborhood
Martin LemkeGame as cultural bridging. The case of the Batavians of Vindolanda
Alessandro PaceAlchester. Life in a fortress of the AD 40’s
Eberhard W. SauerHow were milestone texts transmitted to the stonecutters?
Dé C. SteuresThe Birdoswald Extra-Mural Settlement Project
Tony Wilmott and Ian HaynesPart 5. Cult and religious practices
Sub-Roman and post-Roman Christianity on Hadrian’s Wall. The remarkable new evidence from Vindolanda
Marta Alberti and Andrew Robin BirleyMerkur, Vulkan, Neptun und Herkules. Die Götter der Arbeitswelt und ihre Verehrung im Vicus
Dorit C. EngsterThe marble bust of Mithraic tauroctony from Olbia Pontica
Roman KozlenkoOf pigs and gods. An altar to Jupiter Heliopolitanus from Siscia (Sisak) revisited
Ljubica Perinić and Anton Ye. BaryshnikovA puzzling votive inscription by a decurion of the cohors I Belgarum
Ivan Radman-LivajaPrincipia or monasteries? Two fortified basilicas in the North African frontier zone
Alan RushworthEin großes lararium… oder ein kleiner Tempel. Ein privater Schrein im Nordvicus von Krefeld-Gellep
Eric SponvillePart 6. Speaking of the dead. Funerary customs and grave goods
Across Rome’s Southern Frontier. The Meroitic cemetery at Faras in Sudanese Nubia
Henry C. Bishop-WrightA group of unusual burials under the CUT by-pass, Xanten
Clive BridgerRelecture chronologique de la tombe des enfants du triérarque Domitianus à Boulogne-sur-Mer
Julie Flahaut, Olivier Blamangin, Alexia Morel, Angélique Demon, Christine Hoët-Van Cauwenberghe, Aurore Louis and Annick ThuetThe rural burial landscape in the northern hinterland of Roman Nijmegen
Joep HendriksLife and death at the Danube Limes. The cemeteries of Lauriacum/Enns (Austria)
Lisa Huber, Felix Lang, Maria Marschler, Andrea Stadlmayr and Stefan TraxlerChallenging late antique chronology. Graves as continuity indicators along the Rhine frontier of Germania prima
Rebecca NashanBuried with the dead. Grave goods from twelve Roman cemeteries in the Dutch eastern river area
W. Frederique Reigersman-van Lidth de JeudeRoman funerary archaeology in Slovenia. The known, the new, and the missing
Kaja Stemberger FlegarDeviant burials in late antique Atuatuca Tungrorum (Tongeren, Belgium)
Steven VandewalDying outside the gates. The Brooklyn House, Norton, Yorkshire, bustum burial and busta in Roman Britain
Pete WilsonPart 7. Revisiting Roman imports beyond the frontier. Investigating processes of movement
Roman-barbarian interaction. Revisiting Roman imports beyond the frontier; investigating processes of movement. Introductory remarks
Thomas Schierl, Fraser Hunter and Thomas GraneLuxury, resources, or both? Roman objects in Germanic settlements on the example of Ostwestfalen-Lippe
Hannes BuchmannAsking ‘Why’. Seeking indigenous motivations behind the movement of Roman material into Ireland
Karen Murad
No comments:
Post a Comment