Buch, Englisch, 398 Seiten, Format (B × H): 241 mm x 164 mm, Gewicht: 896 g
Cultural Interaction and the Creation of Identity in Late Antiquity
Buch, Englisch, 398 Seiten, Format (B × H): 241 mm x 164 mm, Gewicht: 896 g
ISBN: 978-0-7546-6814-5
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Introduction; I: Constructing Images of the Impact and Identity of Barbarians; B: Literary Constructions of Barbarian Identity; 1: Catalogues of Barbarians in Late Antiquity 1; 2: Augustine and the Merciful Barbarians 1; 3: Reguli in the Roman Empire, Late Antiquity, and the Early Medieval Germanic Kingdoms; 4: Were the Sasanians Barbarians? Roman Writers on the “Empire of the Persians”; 5: A Roman Image of the “Barbarian” Sasanians 1; B: Political and Religious Interpretations of Barbarian Activities; 6: Banditry or Catastrophe?: History, Archaeology, and Barbarian Raids on Roman Greece 1; 7: John Rufus, Timothy Aelurus, and the Fall of the Western Roman Empire; C: Imperial Manipulation of Perceptions of Barbarians; 8: Imperial Religious Unification Policy and its Divisive Consequences: Diocletian, the Jews, and the Samaritans; 9: Hellenes, Barbarians, and Christians: Religion and Identity Politics in Diocletian's Rome; 10: Barbarians as Spectacle: The Account of an Ancient Embedded Reporter (Symm. Or. 2.10-12); II: Cultural Interaction on the Roman/Barbarian Frontiers; A: Becoming Roman: Movements of People across the Frontier and the Effects of Imperial Policies; 11: The ius colonatus as a Model for the Settlement of Barbarian Prisoners-of-War in the Late Roman Empire?; 12: Spies Like Us: Treason and Identity in the Late Roman Empire; 13: The “Runaway” Avars and Late Antique Diplomacy; B: Becoming Roman: Social and Economic Interchange; 14: Captivity and Romano-Barbarian Interchange; 15: Barbarian Raiders and Barbarian Peasants: Models of Ideological and Economic Integration; C: A New Era of Accommodation; 16: Kush and Rome on the Egyptian Southern Frontier: Where Barbarians Worshipped as Romans and Romans Worshipped as Barbarians 1; 17: Petra and the Saracens: New Evidence from a Recently Discovered Epigram; 18: Elusive Places: A Chorological 1 Approach to Identity and Territory in Scythia Minor (Second–Seventh Centuries); 19: Barbarian Traffic, Demon Oaths, and Christian Scruples (Aug. Epist. 46-47); III: Creating Identity in the Post-Roman World; 20: Visigothic Settlement, Hospitalitas, and Army Payment Reconsidered; 21: Building an Ethnic Identity for a New Gothic and Roman Nobility: Códoba, 615 AD; 22: Vascones and Visigoths: Creation and Transformation of Identity in Northern Spain in Late Antiquity; 23: Identity and Ethnicity during the Era of Migrations and Barbarian Kingdoms in the Light of Archaeology in Gaul 1; 24: Text, Artifact, and Genome: The Disputed Nature of the Anglo-Saxon Migration into Britain; IV: Epilogue: Modern Constructions of Barbarian Identity; 25: Auguste Moutié, Pioneer of Merovingian Archaeology, and the Spurlock Merovingian Collection at the University of Illinois