1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910797401403321

Titolo

Processes of cultural change and integration in the Roman world / / edited by Saskia T. Roselaar

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Leiden, Netherlands ; ; Boston, Massachusetts : , : Brill, , 2015

©2015

ISBN

90-04-29455-4

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (324 p.)

Collana

Mnemosyne, Supplements, History and Archaeology of Classical Antiquity, , 2352-8656 ; ; Volume 382

Disciplina

937

Soggetti

Roman provinces - Administration

Roman provinces - Social conditions

Indigenous peoples - Rome - Provinces - History

Assimilation (Sociology) - Rome

Acculturation - Rome

Rome History Republic, 265-30 B.C Congresses

Rome History Empire, 30 B.C.-476 A.D Congresses

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

This volume is the result of a conference held at the University of Nottingham in July 2013, which focused on processes of integration in the Roman world. This meeting was a follow-up to an earlier conference, held at Manchester in 2010, which looked at processes of integration in the Roman Republic (see LCCN 2012007861). Both conferences started from the idea that, despite the amount of recent scholarship on integration in the ancient world and the impact these had on formation of identities, there are still aspects of these issues that are not fully understood.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.

Nota di contenuto

Preliminary Material -- Introduction: Processes of Cultural Change and Integration in the Roman World / Saskia T. Roselaar -- 1 Theorizing Romanization. Cognition and Cultural Change in Roman Provinces: A Case of Religious Change in Roman Dalmatia / Josipa Lulić -- 2 An Allied View of Integration: Italian Elites and Consumption in the Second Century bc / Rafael Scopacasa -- 3 Minting Apart Together: Bronze



Coinage Production in Campania and Beyond in the Third Century bc / Marleen K. Termeer -- 4 The Archaeology of ‘Integration’ in Western Lucania: A Review of Recent Work / Maurizio Gualtieri -- 5 Volaterrae and the Gens Caecina / Fiona C. Tweedie -- 6 Inungi delectus—The Recruitment of Britons in the Roman Army during the Conquest: The Evidence from Dorset / Christopher Sparey-Green -- 7 Apamea and the Integration of a Roman Colony in Western Asia Minor / Aitor Blanco-Pérez -- 8 Burial and Commemoration in the Roman Colony of Patras / Tamara Dijkstra -- 9 Akkulturation und Integration in der römischen Dobruscha. Das Fallbeispiel der römischen Siedlung Ibida (Slava Rusă) in Rumänien / Alexander Rubel -- 10 Roman Exploitation and New Road Infrastructures in Asturia Transmontana (Asturias, Spain) / Patricia A. Argüelles Álvarez -- 11 Mines and Economic Integration of Provincial ‘Frontiers’ in the Roman Principate / Alfred M. Hirt -- 12 The ‘Opportunistic Exploitation’ of Melos: A Case Study of Economic Integration and Cultural Change in the Roman Cyclades / Enora Le Quéré -- 13 Roman Traders as a Factor of Romanization in Noricum and in the Eastern Transalpine Region / Leonardo Gregoratti -- 14 Spreading Virtues in Republican Italy / Daniele Miano -- 15 Literary Topoi and the Integration of Central Italy / Elisabeth Buchet -- 16 ‘Ein völlig romanisierter Mann’? Identity, Identification, and Integration in the Roman History of Cassius Dio and in Arrian / Christopher Burden-Strevens -- Index.

Sommario/riassunto

Processes of Cultural Change and Integration in the Roman World is a collection of studies on the interaction between Rome and the peoples that became part of its Empire between c. 300 BC and AD 300. The book focuses on the mechanisms by which interaction between Rome and its subjects occurred, e.g. the settlements of colonies by the Romans, army service, economic and cultural interaction. In many cases Rome exploited the economic resources of the conquered territories without allowing the local inhabitants any legal autonomy. However, they usually maintained a great deal of cultural freedom of expression. Those local inhabitants who chose to engage with Rome, its economy and culture, could rise to great heights in the administration of the Empire.