Paperback ISBN: 9789464262841 | Hardback ISBN: 9789464262858 | Imprint: Sidestone Press | Format: 210x280mm | 386 pp. | Language: English | 23 illus. (bw) | 157 illus. (fc) | Keywords: archaeology; Roman Empire; Roman frontiers; limes; Roman army; military supply and control; logistics; material culture | download cover | DOI: 10.59641/mm723py
This publication – Supplying the Roman Empire – is the fourth volume of the LIMES XXV’s congress proceedings and deals with various aspects of the supply and provisioning of the Roman empire, and the role of the Roman armies housed on its fringes herein. The result is a wide-ranging collection of papers dealing with topics such as: finds of organic material; riverine and maritime supply and security; militarily controlled mining; building material procurement and processing; agro-political schemes and water management; military material culture. The proceedings are all arranged around the original sessions, trying to create 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.
Find all four volumes of the LIMES XXV Proceedings here.
Preface
Who were the Logisticians? Dispensatores, imperial agents supplying the army
Stephen R. MatthewsPart 1. Organic riches. The impact of organic resources on frontier research
Organic riches. The contribution of organic materials to the understanding of frontier dynamics
Carol van Driel-MurrayAn integrated study of organic archaeological environments at Vindolanda. A case-study from the 2nd-century extramural settlement
Elizabeth M. Greene and Barbara BirleyFrom tree to post. Logistics and organisation around infrastructural works in the Lower Germanic Limes
Silke LangeWood, Craft, and People. The potential and challenges of wooden objects from Roman contexts
Rob SandsEm)bedding the Romans. Rare fragments of a Roman bed in the extra-mural settlement of Marktveld-Weerdkampen, Valkenburg, Zuid-Holland (the Netherlands)
Tamara J.J. Vernimmen, Stephan T.A.M. Mols, Jeroen Loopik and Wouter K. VosAs good as new? A remarkable find of wooden roof-shingles from Houten, the Netherlands
Ivo Vossen, Tamara J.J. Vernimmen and Sjoerd van DaalenPart 2. ‘Ripae et litora’. Supply and security on the riverine and coastal edges of the Roman Empire
The River Main (Hesse/Germany) as route of military supply. New archaeological and geoarchaeological research
Thomas Becker, Andreas Vött, Lea Obrocki and Anna-Lena DixiusThe castra Velsen 2
Arjen V.A.J. BosmanThe Roman sea frontier along the Channel and North Sea. Development, nature, tactics, and strategy
Wouter DhaezeWere there any repairs to the Rhine bridge Colonia Agrippina. Divitia at the end of the 4th century AD under the magister militum Arbogast the Elder? Dendrochronological data and historical classification
Norbert Hanel and Thomas FrankInvestigating Corbulo’s Canal. A situation report
Wilfried A.M. HessingPrisoners of ethno-geography. Transnational dynamics of warfare between Late Iron Age Ireland and the Roman frontier in Britain, 122-163 AD
Al McCluskeyWhen’s a fleet a fleet? Classes and legions on the water
Christoph RummelDefending dunes. Details of the Antonine coastal limes between Rhine and Meuse
Jeroen van ZoolingenSecuring transport of wood over water on the Roman Rhine
Ronald M. VisserPart 3. Rome’s hunger for metals. Roman mining in and outside the provinces and the part of the Roman military
Roman army and mining
Markus ScholzUnder the eyes of the Roman army. Early imperial mining on the Lower Lahn river (D)
Frederic Auth, Daniel Burger-Völlmecke, Peter Henrich and Markus ScholzCasting the smith in a new light. Using social theories of technology to understand of Roman military metalworking
Amy J. BakerA new Roman camp north of the Lower German Limes at Ermelo (The Netherlands)
Mark Driessen and Wouter Verschoof-van der VaartThe Roman army in the Oriental Pyrenees (2nd-1st century BC). Territorial control and management of provincial resources in the High Lands
Oriol Olesti Vila, Joan Oller Guzmán and Jordi Morera CamprubíVon Bergleuten, Händlern und römischem Militär im Lahntal (D)
Gabriele RasbachPart 4. Brickyards and limes kilns of the Roman army
The brickyards of Legio IIII Flavia Felix in Dacia in the early 2nd century AD
Alexandru FluturThe newly excavated brick and tile kiln in the Vindolanda North Field
Craig A. Harvey and Elizabeth M. GreeneThe Saalburg Tile Kiln Project. Making Roman ceramic building materials the whole way
Rüdiger SchwarzThe lime kilns of Legio II Italica in Lauriacum/Enns (Noricum)
Stefan Traxler, Felix Lang, Herbert Böhm and Gerald GrabherrPart 5. Water and agriculture
The aqueduct of Noviomagus
Paul M. KessenerMaterial traces of viticulture in Southern Pannonia
Jana Kopáčková and Hana IvezićThe Chesters road bridge and wharf on Hadrian’s Wall
Ian LonghurstOrganization of the water supply for the Trajanic frontier fort in the Nabataean settlement of Hawara (Southern Jordan)
John Peter Oleson and Craig A. HarveyVessels with the handle above the opening from Lower Pannonia and Upper Moesia
Ivana Ožanić Roguljić and Angelina Raičković SavićIrrigating the land, provisioning the caravans. Water decline and military settlement at el-Deir (Kharga Oasis, Western Desert of Egypt), 3rd-5th century AD
Gaëlle Tallet and Jean-Paul BravardErd-Reich – Earthen Empire. Eine Übersicht zu neuen, geoarchäologischen Untersuchungen zum Rasensodenbau am römischen Limes
Tanja Romankiewicz, Ben Russell, Christopher T.S. Beckett, J. Riley Snyder and Rose FerrabyPart 6. Small finds everywhere
Water and control along the later Roman Empire’s south-eastern border
Walter D. WardThe Jets vs. the Sharks, a story from the west side of Vindonissa. Comparison of two brooch assemblages from the civil settlement West
Hannes FlückNew insights into the distribution of Roman metal finds in the Netherlands with PAN
Stefanie HossRittium – Surduk
Hana Ivezić and Jana KopáčkováHier auch! Webgewichte in den Legionslagern Neuss und Bonn
Tünde Kaszab-OlschewskiMilitary small finds from Castra Ad Fluvium Frigidum (Slovenia)
Ana R. Kovačič and Maruša UrekMilitaria in the Cantabrian Wars. The Carisa axis of operations. The cases of Ḷḷagüezos and A Cuaña
Esperanza Martín HernándezThe Roman army on the Rhine and the monetization of the rural hinterland
Rahel OtteMilitary equipment and horse gear from the Nijmegen castra and canabae legionis
Vincent van der VeenSemi-rigid scale armour. Characteristics, dating and distribution of a Roman body armour
Martijn A. WijnhovenMilitary artefacts in the civil province of Britannia. A case study: Trompetenmuster mounts
Edwin Wood
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