This book is a study of the process conventionally termed 'Romanization' through an investigation of the experience of Rome's Gallic provinces in the late Republic and early empire. Beginning with a rejection of the concept of 'Romanization' it describes the nature of Roman power in Gaul and the Romans' own understanding of these changes. Successive chapters then map the chronology and geography of change and offer new interpretations of urbanism, rural civilization, consumption and cult, before concluding with a synoptic view of Gallo-Roman civilization and of the origins of provincial cultures in general. The work draws on literary and archaeological material to make a contribution to the cultural history of the empire which will be of interest to ancient historians, classical archaeologists and all interested in cultural change.
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' ... a bold and far-reaching study, and a particularly valuable addition to the corpus of literature on the Western Roman provinces.' The Times Literary Supplement
' ... a stimulating and impressive achievement.' The Cambridge Archaeological Journal
'[Greg Woolf] has ... produced a study that any serious student of the ancient world must read, and that is without question the best book on the western provinces written this decade.' Bryn Mawr Classical Review
'... rich and versatile ... The book combines an enormous amount of detailed research with a decade of profound reflection.' The Classical Review
'... many scholars will find it a useful source of reference ... original and scholarly ... it belongs on the reading list of the many undergraduate course-units to which it will be pertinent ... invaluable introduction written for an intelligent audience with little prior knowledge ... university library copies stand to become well thumbed by an audience spanning all levels. ... a thought-provoking book that has much to teach authors on Roman Britain.' Journal of Roman Studies
This is a study of the process conventionally termed Romanization through an analysis of the experience of Roman rule over the Gallic provinces in the period 200 BC–AD 300. It examines how and why Gallo-Roman civilisation emerged from the confrontation between the cultures of Gaul and the classical civilisation.
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Hardcover. Condition: Very Good. Dust Jacket Condition: Very Good. First Edition. XV - 296 pp. 3 maps. 17 fig. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge 1998. First Edition. Hardcover. Ex lib. of the Library of the Ghent University: only one small stamp on the flyleaf. Otherwise a very nice copy. Seller Inventory # 009587
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Seller: Scrinium Classical Antiquity, Aalten, Netherlands
Cambridge University Press, 1998. XV,(3),296p. ills.(B&W line drawings). Hard bound with dust wrps. Glue shining through paste-down endpapers near hinges. Still a nice copy. ?W.?s book is rich and versatile. An introductory chapter explains why the predominant paradigm of ?Romanisation? is ?fundamentally flawed as a heuristic tool? - and he realises that, if the nineteenth-century term ?Romanisation is suspect, then its twentieth-century antithesis ?resistance?, must also be discarded. W. adopts cultural relativism as ?the best working hypothesis available? (?). Using a broad definition of Roman and Gallic culture which comprehends the whole range of objects, beliefs, and practices of those who were Roman and Gallic (?). Moreover, he is rightly more interested in describing and understanding cultural change than in trying to explain it. Seven main chapters describe successively the impact of Roman power on Gallic society, Gallic adoption of roman concepts of civilisation, cultural change reflected in epigraphy, the creation of Gallo-Roman cities in what had been a country of villages, the culture of the countryside outside the cities, changes in the scale and patterns of material consumption measured primarily through ceramic evidence, and the evolution of a distinctively Gallo-Roman religion. A briefer concluding chapter indicates how Gaul may serve as a model for understanding cultural change elsewhere in the Roman Empire. The book combines an enormous amount of detailed research with a decade of profound reflection.? (T.D. BARNES in The Classical Review (New Series), 2000, pp.202-203). Seller Inventory # 60382
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