In order to better grasp the influence of Roman infrastructure on adjacent urban areas, some 25 cities near the ancient Via Egnatia in Greece have been studied to compare their political, economic...Show moreIn order to better grasp the influence of Roman infrastructure on adjacent urban areas, some 25 cities near the ancient Via Egnatia in Greece have been studied to compare their political, economic and social status before and after the construction of this Roman highway. With this comparison, the impact a Roman road could have had on cities and their development can be mapped more precisely.Show less
Since July 2021 the Lower Germanic Limes has become UNESCO world heritage, this not only led to more public attention to the north-western part of the Roman Empire but also to more scholarly...Show moreSince July 2021 the Lower Germanic Limes has become UNESCO world heritage, this not only led to more public attention to the north-western part of the Roman Empire but also to more scholarly attention. However, most of the scholarly research on the Roman limes in the Netherlands has been done by archaeologists causing historians to be barely involved in the debate. This thesis therefore aims to contribute to the recent developments and tries to re-examine the Roman past closer to home from a historian’s point of view, to see what the events, processes, causes and reasons were that led up to the creation of the Lower German Limes which eventually also resulted in the consolidation and official incorporation of the region into the province Germania Inferior, by not only looking at the political and military events but also the economic and social aspects.Show less
In older scholarship, it was often claimed that Christian martyrdom contributed significantly to the conversion of the Roman Empire. This assertion, however, has been significantly criticized in...Show moreIn older scholarship, it was often claimed that Christian martyrdom contributed significantly to the conversion of the Roman Empire. This assertion, however, has been significantly criticized in recent decades, so that conversion in response to witnessing acts of Christian martyrdom now appears to have been relatively minor. In order to both elaborate on and critically evaluate these criticisms, the present thesis compares a number of Christian and ‘pagan’ texts from the second and third centuries CE that deal with martyrdom and/or ‘noble death’. While the thesis pays attention to issues surrounding the scale on which martyrdom occurred and the extent to which witnessing the torture and execution of Christians may have inspired conversion, its main focus is on the importance of martyr texts to the Christianization of the Roman Empire. ‘Christianization’ here is used in a more general sense, and includes not only conversion, but also the formation of Christian (group)identity and the catechesis of new members. With regards to the possibility of Christian texts being used to convert outsiders or instruct the newly-initiated, the thesis works from the assumption that these ‘pagan’ audiences would have been more likely to adopt a favourable view of Christian martyrdom – and perhaps concomitantly, Christianity – insofar as its (literary) representations presented it as similar to noble death. Simultaneously, the thesis argues that Christian martyr texts contain several unique elements, principally religious in character, that allowed them to out-live ‘pagan’ noble death traditions like that of the Acta Alexandrinorum. These shared and unique aspects are recovered through an in-depth analysis and comparison of a number of Christian and ‘pagan’ texts. All in all, the findings of the thesis generally agree with earlier revisionist publications, and suggest that conversion induced by martyrdom was rare, and that the importance of martyr texts to Early Christianity mostly lay in their ability to provide Christian groups with powerful communities identities and moral exemplars.Show less
This work analyses the police apparatus of early imperial Rome. The research is embedded in existing theories about policing and explores by what means the Roman state managed to police early...Show moreThis work analyses the police apparatus of early imperial Rome. The research is embedded in existing theories about policing and explores by what means the Roman state managed to police early imperial Rome.Show less
Historiography has characterised Roman North Africa as consisting of 'two worlds', a world of Roman cities on the one hand and indigenous rural hinterlands on the other. Using geographical analysis...Show moreHistoriography has characterised Roman North Africa as consisting of 'two worlds', a world of Roman cities on the one hand and indigenous rural hinterlands on the other. Using geographical analysis, survey archaeology and discourse analysis, this thesis researches the extent to which the marginal hinterlands (or 'shatter zones') of Late Antique North Africa were integrated into the wider Roman, Mediterranean state space. Despite the topographic difficulties for the Roman Empire to control the mountainous and steppe inland of the region, survey archaeology reveals a landscape that became thoroughly transformed under the later Roman Empire. Integration in the third to fifth centuries ended in the sixth century under the pressure of emperor Justinian's ideology of imperial renovatio.Show less
This thesis undertakes a comparative analysis of the Roman Empire during the third-century 'crisis' (AD 249-284) on the one hand and the tetrarchic era (AD 284-324) on the other hand. As an...Show moreThis thesis undertakes a comparative analysis of the Roman Empire during the third-century 'crisis' (AD 249-284) on the one hand and the tetrarchic era (AD 284-324) on the other hand. As an analysis of the Roman Empire in all its aspects is obviously not feasible, the thesis limits itself to the three most important ones: first, Rome's wars against its external enemies; second, the internal instability that plagued the empire throughout this period; third, the empire's economic difficulties. After a short narrative chapter which serves to give a general chronological outline and introduce the key players, each of the three aspects is thouroughly discussed in its own thematic chapter. An important theme of the thesis is comparative historiography, which shows how there remains general agreement among historians that the tetrarchic era represents a significant improvement in the fortunes of the empire compared to the 'crisis' that preceded it. The thesis argues that, contrary to the general consensus, the tetrarchy only improved on the 'crisis' in some regards, while it did no better, and arguably even worse, on other points.Show less
This paper seeks to give a plausible range of population figures for second century A.D. Antioch in Roman Syria. The first chapter estimates the physical extent of the city and its suburbs. The...Show moreThis paper seeks to give a plausible range of population figures for second century A.D. Antioch in Roman Syria. The first chapter estimates the physical extent of the city and its suburbs. The second chapter studies the size and productivity of Antioch’s territory. On the basis of urbanisation rates, urban and rural population densities and ‘carrying capacity’ various scenarios are sketched to determine more and less likely figures. In the final chapter several ideas are considered towards explaining the population of Antioch and its hinterland.Show less
Research master thesis | History: Societies and Institutions (research) (MA)
open access
Beginning under the Flavian dynasty, large quantities of river personifications start to appear in Roman art and coinage, a trend which lasts until the third century A.D. These images are often...Show moreBeginning under the Flavian dynasty, large quantities of river personifications start to appear in Roman art and coinage, a trend which lasts until the third century A.D. These images are often regarded as little more than fashionable decorative items. This thesis argues however that, far from being merely decorative pieces, river personifications give us a unique insight in Roman ideas on geography, imperial power and civilization.Show less
Research master thesis | History: Societies and Institutions (research) (MA)
open access
In de eerste eeuwen na Christus was het Romeinse Rijk een multicultureel, meertalig rijk dat vele verschillende gebieden en volkeren omvatte. Latijn, als taal van veroveraars en als taal van de...Show moreIn de eerste eeuwen na Christus was het Romeinse Rijk een multicultureel, meertalig rijk dat vele verschillende gebieden en volkeren omvatte. Latijn, als taal van veroveraars en als taal van de keizerlijke administratie, had een unieke positie in het rijk. Deze positie als belangrijkste taal van het rijk deelde Latijn slechts in sommige delen van het rijk met het Grieks. De Romeinen veroverden niet alleen verschillende koninkrijken en volkeren maar ook verschillende taalgebieden en vele provinciale talen bleven in gebruik in de eerste eeuwen na Christus binnen de grenzen van het Romeinse Rijk. In mijn thesis beantwoord ik de vraag hoe deze provinciale talen in gebruik bleven naast het Latijn en Grieks en welke interactie er plaatsvond tussen deze talen in de eerste drie eeuwen na Christus en hoe dit ons beeld van het de acculturatie in het Romeinse Rijk beïnvloedt. Om deze vraag te beantwoorden, heb ik een inventarisatie gemaakt van de inscripties van de verschillende provinciale talen die werden geschreven in de eerste drie eeuwen na Christus. De acht talen die zijn geattesteerd in de eerste drie eeuwen na Christus zijn: Neo-Phrygisch en Pisidisch in Klein-Azië, Aramees en Hebreeuws in de oostelijke provincies, Libisch en Neo-Punisch in Noord-Afrika, Lusitanisch in het Iberisch schiereiland en Gallisch in Frankrijk. Deze inventarisatie geeft een overzicht in de hoeveelheid inscripties geschreven in een provinciale taal en de domeinen waarin deze inscripties werden gebruikt. Mijn onderzoek omvat het hele Romeinse Rijk, van de Britse eilanden tot Syrië en van Noord-Afrika tot Klein-Azië en creëert zo de mogelijkheid om verschillende gebieden met elkaar te vergelijken. Aan de ene kant maak ik zeer intensief gebruik van epigrafisch materiaal omdat ik inscripties in vele verschillende talen en uit verschillende gebieden behandel, maar aan de andere kant is mijn gebruik van de inscripties gelimiteerd omdat ik de inscripties niet in detail lees of behandel. Epigrafisch materiaal levert een vruchtbare benadering voor de studie van sociale verandering en acculturatie. Taal is een belangrijk deel van de identiteit van personen en volkeren. Omdat taal een essentieel deel uitmaakt van cultuur, is het een belangrijk aspect binnen acculturatiestudies. Taalgebruik, zowel publiek en privé, kan een uiting zijn van culturele identiteit, maar het is een ook middel tot intercultureel contact of integratie en stijgen op de sociale ladder. Dit onderzoek plaatst taalgebruik stevig binnen het overkoepelende acculturatiedebat over het Romeinse rijk.Show less