Frontiers of the Roman Empire : a social and economic study

Bibliographic Information

Frontiers of the Roman Empire : a social and economic study

C.R. Whittaker

(Ancient society and history)(Johns Hopkins paperbacks)

Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997, c1994

Johns Hopkins Paperbacks ed

  • : pbk

Other Title

Frontières de l'Empire romain

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Hardcoverは別書誌<BA23443740>

Bibliography: p. 307-330

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Although the Roman empire was one of the longest lasting in history, it was never ideologically conceived by its rulers or inhabitants as a territory within fixed limits. Yet Roman armies clearly reached certain points-which today we call frontiers-where they simply stopped advancing and annexing new territories. In Frontiers of the Roman Empire, C. R. Whittaker examines the Roman frontiers both in terms of what they meant to the Romans and in their military, economic, and social function. Observing that frontiers are rarely, if ever, static, Whittaker argues that the very success of the Roman frontiers as permeable border zones sowed the seeds of their eventual destruction. As the frontiers of the late empire ceased to function, the ideological distinctions between Romans and barbarians became blurred. Yet the very permeability of the frontiers, Whittaker contends, also permitted a transformation of Roman society, breathing new life into the empire rather than causing its complete extinction.

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