Social Interactions and Status Markers in the Roman World
eBook - PDF

Social Interactions and Status Markers in the Roman World

  1. 180 pages
  2. English
  3. PDF
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF

Social Interactions and Status Markers in the Roman World

About this book

In 2016, in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, some forty scholars from around the world attended the People of the Ancient World conference. This was organized within the framework of the Romans 1 by 1 project, and its main focus was on improving knowledge on ancient populations, employing a variety of methodologies, tools and research techniques. The presentations provided the editors with ten papers to be further developed and reunited under these covers. They encompass diverse approaches to Roman provincial populations and the corresponding case-studies highlight the multi-faceted character of Roman society. The volume takes four main directions: prosopography (from Italy to Spain); ancient professions and professionals (merchants in Noricum, Lower Moesia, general nomenclature and encoding of professions, associations and family life); onomastics and origins, and finally, the military (iconography of funerary monunments and centurions' social life). The publication is intended, on one hand, to enhance knowledge of the diversity of Roman social standings, of the exhibited social markers and – perhaps most important – stress the variety of forms which express status and place within the community, and on the other, to reiterate a series of fresh, modern views on these matters, resulting from a gathering of mostly junior researchers.

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Yes, you can access Social Interactions and Status Markers in the Roman World by George Cupcea,Rada Varga, George Cupcea, Rada Varga in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Social Sciences & Roman Ancient History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Table of contents

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  8. Notes on contributors
  9. Foreword
  10. The Barbii, trade in Noricum and the influence of the local epigraphic habit on status display
  11. The professionals of the Latin West.
  12. Latin Occupational Titles in Roman Textile Trade
  13. The professions of private slaves and freedmen in Moesia Inferior
  14. Prosopography of the Leading Families of Larinum in the Roman period
  15. The kindred dimension of the Black Sea associations: between fictive and real meaning
  16. Tarraco. Town and society in a 2nd century AD Roman provincial capital
  17. Soldiers and their monuments for posterity. Manifestations of martial identity in the funerary iconography of Roman Dacia
  18. Origo as identity factor in Roman epitaphs
  19. Centurions: Military or Social Elite?