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The Barbarians Speak How The Conquered Peoples Shaped Roman Europe Peter S Wells

  • SKU: BELL-46274472
The Barbarians Speak How The Conquered Peoples Shaped Roman Europe Peter S Wells
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

4.8

44 reviews

The Barbarians Speak How The Conquered Peoples Shaped Roman Europe Peter S Wells instant download after payment.

Publisher: Princeton University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 31.11 MB
Pages: 352
Author: Peter S. Wells
ISBN: 9781400843466, 1400843464
Language: English
Year: 2021

Product desciption

The Barbarians Speak How The Conquered Peoples Shaped Roman Europe Peter S Wells by Peter S. Wells 9781400843466, 1400843464 instant download after payment.

The Barbarians Speak re-creates the story of Europe's indigenous people who were nearly stricken from historical memory even as they adopted and transformed aspects of Roman culture. The Celts and Germans inhabiting temperate Europe before the arrival of the Romans left no written record of their lives and were often dismissed as "barbarians" by the Romans who conquered them. Accounts by Julius Caesar and a handful of other Roman and Greek writers would lead us to think that prior to contact with the Romans, European natives had much simpler political systems, smaller settlements, no evolving social identities, and that they practiced human sacrifice. A more accurate, sophisticated picture of the indigenous people emerges, however, from the archaeological remains of the Iron Age. Here Peter Wells brings together information that has belonged to the realm of specialists and enables the general reader to share in the excitement of rediscovering a "lost people." In so doing, he is the first to marshal material evidence in a broad-scale examination of the response by the Celts and Germans to the Roman presence in their lands.

 Wells explains that the presence--or absence--of Roman influence among these artifacts reveals a range of attitudes toward Rome at particular times, from enthusiastic acceptance among urban elites to creative resistance among rural inhabitants. In fascinating detail, Wells shows that these societies did grow more cosmopolitan under Roman occupation, but that the people were much more than passive beneficiaries; in many cases they helped determine the outcomes of Roman military and political initiatives. This book is at once a provocative, alternative reading of Roman history and a catalyst for overturning long-standing assumptions about nonliterate and indigenous societies.

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