Border Communities at the Edge of the Roman Empire

Jasper de Bruin

Border Communities at the Edge of the Roman Empire

Processes of Change in the Civitas Cananefatium

In Roman times, the area between the Lower Rhine and the Meuse in the present day province of South Holland in the Netherlands, was known as the administrative district of the community of the Cananefates (the civitas Cananefatium). The formation of this community, as well as the changes that took place within this group, were researched by means of a systematic analysis of the archaeological remains. In order to understand the role of the Roman state in these processes, the urban and military communities were also studied. In this way an overview was created of an administrative region in which aspects such as the interaction between the different groups, the character of the rural community and the differences with other rural groups along the borders of the Roman Empire could be studied.
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Auteur

Jasper de Bruin

Dr. Jasper de Bruin (1976) graduated in Archaeology of the Roman period at the University of Amsterdam and started working as a lecturer at Leiden University in 2006, where he completed his Ph.D. thesis in 2017. Currently, he is employed as assistant professor at Leiden University, where he teaches about and researches the Roman period in Northwestern Europe.
Titel
Border Communities at the Edge of the Roman Empire
Subtitel
Processes of Change in the Civitas Cananefatium
Auteur
Prijs
€ 145,99
ISBN
9789048543861
Uitvoering
eBook PDF (Adobe DRM)
Aantal pagina's
308
Publicatiedatum
Afmetingen
21 x 29.7 cm
Serie
Amsterdam Archaeological Studies
Categorieën
Antiquity
Art and Material Cultures
Sociology and Social History
Discipline
History, Art History, and Archaeology
Ook beschikbaar als
Hardback - € 146,00

Recensies

Border Communities delivers an interesting insight into the formation of communities during Roman times. The book is a useful and valuable English-language contribution to the complex subject of regional diversity and identity in the Roman empire.”
- Jeroen van Zoolingen, Britannia, Vol. 53

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