Prior to the third century A.D., two broad Roman conceptions of frontiers proliferated and competed: an imperial ideology of rule without limit coexisted with very real and pragmatic attempts to define and defend imperial frontiers. But from about A.D. 250-500, there was a basic shift in mentality, as news from and about frontiers began to portray a more defined Roman world—a world with limits—allowing a new understanding of frontiers as territorial and not just as divisions of people. This concept, previously unknown in the ancient world, brought with it a new consciousness, which soon spread to cosmology, geography, myth, sacred texts, and prophecy. The "frontier consciousness" produced a unified sense of Roman identity that transcended l...
I. Art of the frontier and Romanization The physical and geopolitical peripheral territories were ch...
The Late Republican to Early Imperial period was one of spectacular territorial expansion into the s...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013In a purely territorial sense, a Roman empire, defined...
Prior to the third century A.D., two broad Roman conceptions of frontiers proliferated and competed:...
The concept of identity and the concept of a frontier are inextricably intertwined. Indeed the very ...
Roman frontiers defined the Roman Empire, one of the greatest states that the world has ever seen. B...
Roman frontiers defined the Roman Empire, one of the greatest states that the world has ever seen. B...
Descriptions of the edges of the Roman world were shaped by social preoccupations and identity issu...
Few empires had such an impact on the conquered peoples as did the Roman empire, creating social, ec...
The study argues that the late Roman frontier in Arabia is best viewed as a transitional contact zon...
Pervading Empire addresses the issue of diversity within the Roman Empire and promotes interpretatio...
Sarah Davies leads us through an examination of the conceptual boundary of Roman imperium, and chang...
2016-08-06Geographic writing is often treated as an objective description of space, but the processe...
Rome engaged in military and diplomatic expansionistic state behavior, which we now describe as ‘imp...
The Roman empire remains unique. Although Rome claimed to rule the world, it did not. Rather, its un...
I. Art of the frontier and Romanization The physical and geopolitical peripheral territories were ch...
The Late Republican to Early Imperial period was one of spectacular territorial expansion into the s...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013In a purely territorial sense, a Roman empire, defined...
Prior to the third century A.D., two broad Roman conceptions of frontiers proliferated and competed:...
The concept of identity and the concept of a frontier are inextricably intertwined. Indeed the very ...
Roman frontiers defined the Roman Empire, one of the greatest states that the world has ever seen. B...
Roman frontiers defined the Roman Empire, one of the greatest states that the world has ever seen. B...
Descriptions of the edges of the Roman world were shaped by social preoccupations and identity issu...
Few empires had such an impact on the conquered peoples as did the Roman empire, creating social, ec...
The study argues that the late Roman frontier in Arabia is best viewed as a transitional contact zon...
Pervading Empire addresses the issue of diversity within the Roman Empire and promotes interpretatio...
Sarah Davies leads us through an examination of the conceptual boundary of Roman imperium, and chang...
2016-08-06Geographic writing is often treated as an objective description of space, but the processe...
Rome engaged in military and diplomatic expansionistic state behavior, which we now describe as ‘imp...
The Roman empire remains unique. Although Rome claimed to rule the world, it did not. Rather, its un...
I. Art of the frontier and Romanization The physical and geopolitical peripheral territories were ch...
The Late Republican to Early Imperial period was one of spectacular territorial expansion into the s...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2013In a purely territorial sense, a Roman empire, defined...