Abstract
Abstract
This paper is a plea for the rehabilitation of the concept of
Romanisation in the discussion about socio-cultural change resulting from
the confrontation of (proto-)historical peoples with Roman power and an
often dominant Roman culture. In the theoretical introduction, first of all
an attempt is made to identify the social mechanisms of Romanisation; this
is followed by a discussion on a model of dimensional analysis attuned to
the dynamics of specific processes of Romanisation.
The major part of the article is devoted to an outline of the
Romanisation process in the northern frontier zone of the Roman Empire, the
Lower Rhine region. It focuses on the political and cultural interaction
between the Batavian tribe living here and the Romans in the period between
the Gallic war and the 3rd century A.D. The paper attempts to explain the
differences between the process of Romanisation in the central part of Gaul
(‘Interior Gaul’ in Greg Woolf's terminology) which had already been
‘civilised’ early on and the military frontier, where tribal traditions
still continued to play an important part, certainly until the Batavian
revolt of 69/70 A.D.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Archeology,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
3 articles.
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