This thesis descusses the use of the Rhine River by Julius Caesar in his commentaries, De Bello Gallico, covering the Gallic Wars of approximately 58 to 52 B.C., to identify the peoples and territories separated by its current. This thesis addresses the issue of how Caesar understood this division of space, what criteria he employed to support his use of the river, and his protrayal of these matters within his account. It seeks to clarify the foundation of a major national border of western history in the context of its initial involvement in the context of the Roman Late Republic. This thesis approaches the question of Caesar\u27s use of the Rhine from a literary perspective. It places an emphasis on contemporary sources and Caesar\u27s ow...
Imagine a Roman citizen of the 50s BCE unrolling Caesar’s Commentarii de Bello Gallico. They might e...
The economic development of frontier regions has been neglected in the study of the Roman economy. T...
This paper examines the changing attitudes of Gallo-Romans from the time of Caesar's conquest in the...
Political Thoughts and Change. The Border of the Rhine in Caesar’s Gallic War The Gallic War, writt...
This thesis will analyse Roman imperial policy in Germania from Caesar to Domitian. It will be argue...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)Julius Caesar invaded Gaul in 58BC and spent the best...
Dans le grand ensemble géographique de l’Empire romain, la région du delta du Rhin demeurait une zon...
Julius Caesar’s military achievements, described in his Gallic War, are monumental; so are the atroc...
Among the Roman Empire’s great geographical reach, the Rhine delta area remained a marginal zone, at...
© 2011 Sarah J. DavidsonThis thesis argues that Caesar’s Commentarii Belli Gallici is engaged in a L...
The works of the continuators of Caesar have often been overlooked as literary texts. Those few scho...
A Collection of Notes on the Geography of Caesar's Campaigns in Gaul with a series of Maps to show C...
Caesar's campaigns in Gaul, Germany and Britain occasioned great excitement in Rome. For Catullus "t...
This paper intends to explore the past representations of Vercingetorix and the Gauls as defined by ...
The Greeks considered the barbarians of Central and Northern Europe to be Celts in the west, and Scy...
Imagine a Roman citizen of the 50s BCE unrolling Caesar’s Commentarii de Bello Gallico. They might e...
The economic development of frontier regions has been neglected in the study of the Roman economy. T...
This paper examines the changing attitudes of Gallo-Romans from the time of Caesar's conquest in the...
Political Thoughts and Change. The Border of the Rhine in Caesar’s Gallic War The Gallic War, writt...
This thesis will analyse Roman imperial policy in Germania from Caesar to Domitian. It will be argue...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)Julius Caesar invaded Gaul in 58BC and spent the best...
Dans le grand ensemble géographique de l’Empire romain, la région du delta du Rhin demeurait une zon...
Julius Caesar’s military achievements, described in his Gallic War, are monumental; so are the atroc...
Among the Roman Empire’s great geographical reach, the Rhine delta area remained a marginal zone, at...
© 2011 Sarah J. DavidsonThis thesis argues that Caesar’s Commentarii Belli Gallici is engaged in a L...
The works of the continuators of Caesar have often been overlooked as literary texts. Those few scho...
A Collection of Notes on the Geography of Caesar's Campaigns in Gaul with a series of Maps to show C...
Caesar's campaigns in Gaul, Germany and Britain occasioned great excitement in Rome. For Catullus "t...
This paper intends to explore the past representations of Vercingetorix and the Gauls as defined by ...
The Greeks considered the barbarians of Central and Northern Europe to be Celts in the west, and Scy...
Imagine a Roman citizen of the 50s BCE unrolling Caesar’s Commentarii de Bello Gallico. They might e...
The economic development of frontier regions has been neglected in the study of the Roman economy. T...
This paper examines the changing attitudes of Gallo-Romans from the time of Caesar's conquest in the...