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El. knyga: Settlement and Soldiers in the Roman Near East

(University of Hull, UK)
  • Formatas: 300 pages
  • Serija: Variorum Collected Studies
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-Oct-2024
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040249611
  • Formatas: 300 pages
  • Serija: Variorum Collected Studies
  • Išleidimo metai: 28-Oct-2024
  • Leidėjas: Routledge
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781040249611

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This collection of studies on the Roman Near East represents Professor Kennedy’s academic assessment of the region, which began with his doctoral thesis on the contribution of Syria to the Roman army. Although the thesis was never published, several articles owe their genesis to work done then or soon after and are included here (VI, VII, IX, XII). The two prominent sub-themes in this collection are the Roman military and various aspects of society and settlement - settlement types, farming, logistical underpinning and communications.

The Roman Near East has been a source of fascination and exasperation - an immense area, a rich archaeological heritage as well as documents in several local languages, a region with a great depth of urbanisation and development ... yet relatively neglected by modern researchers and difficult to work on and in. Local archaeologists are often under-funded and the Roman period viewed as an earlier phase of western colonialism. Happily, the immense surge in archaeological and historical research on the Roman period everywhere has included the Roman Near East and there have been significant academic developments. This collection of studies on the Roman Near East represents Professor Kennedy’s academic assessment of the region, which began with his doctoral thesis on the contribution of Syria to the Roman army. Although the thesis was never published, several articles owe their genesis to work done then or soon after and are included here (VI, VII, IX, XII). Initial visits to military sites in Syria and Jordan swiftly brought out the presence in many cases of associated civil settlements and - though often now gone, the traces of ancient field systems. Hence, the two prominent sub-themes in this collection are the Roman military and various aspects of society and settlement - settlement types, farming, logistical underpinning and communications.

Recenzijos

'... the quality of the papers is excellent, and all of them are well worth reprinting and re-reading. ... this volume is invaluable and strongly recommended.' Bryn Mawr Classical Review

Preface vii
Acknowledgements ix
Abbreviations x
The Roman Near East
I The Roman Near East
368
Review ofM. Sartre, The Middle East under Rome. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, pp. xiv and 665 The International History Review 28.2, 2006
II Demography, the population of Syria and the census of Q. Aemilius Secundus
124(329)
Levant 38, 2006
Settlement
III The identity of Roman Gerasa: an archaeological approach
Identities in the Eastern Mediterranean in Antiquity: Proceedings of a Conference Held at the Humanities Research Centre in Canberra, 10-12 November, 1997, ed. G. Clarke (Mediterranean Archaeology 11, 1998). Sydney, 1999 (includes bibliography, pp. 1-4)
IV The frontier of settlement in Roman Arabia: Gerasa to Umm el-Jimal ... and beyond
453
Mediterraneo Antico 3.2, 2000
V Water supply and use in the Southern Hauran, Jordan
290
Journal of Field Archaeology 22.3, 1995
Soldiers
VI The special command of M. Valerius Lollianus
81(115)
Donum Amicitiae. Studies in Ancient History, ed. E. Dabrowa (Electrum 1). Krakow, 1997
VII C. Velius Rufus
196(113)
Britannia 14, 1983
VIII Legio VI Ferrata, the annexation and early garrison of Arabia
309
Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 84, 1980
IX The construction of a vexillation from the army of Syria and the origin of alae milliariae
185
Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik 61, 1985
X The garrisoning of Mesopotamia in the late Antonine and early Severan period
66(343)
Antichthon 21, 1987
XI `Europaean' soldiers and the Severan siege of Hatra
409
The Defence of the Roman and Byzantine East, eds P. Freeman and D. Kennedy (BAR, International Series 297 = British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Monograph No. 8). Oxford, 1986
XII The military contribution of Syria to the Roman imperial army
246
The Eastern Frontier of the Roman Empire, eds D. French and C. Lightfoot (BAR, International Series 553 = British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara Monograph No. 11). Oxford, 1989
XIII Two Nabataean and Roman sites in southern Jordan: Khirbet el-Qirana and Khirbet el-Khalde
21
Oikistes, eds V. Gorman and E. Robinson. Leiden: Brill, 2002, pp. 361-386
Addenda 5
References 4(4)
Index 8
David L. Kennedy is Winthrop Professor of Classics and Ancient History at the University of Western Australia, Australia.