2008
DOI: 10.1017/cbo9780511499692
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Roman Imperialism and Local Identities

Abstract: In this book, Louise Revell examines questions of Roman imperialism and Roman ethnic identity and explores Roman imperialism as a lived experience based around the paradox of similarity and difference. Her case studies of public architecture in several urban settings provide an understanding of the ways in which urbanism, the emperor and religion were part of the daily encounters of the peoples in these communities. Revell applies the ideas of agency and practice in her examination of the structures that held … Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Usually the Cinderella of accounts about towns in Roman Britain, the great majority of the population that continued to live on the land rarely feature as anything other than passive observers, supporters or recipients of urban life. As Revell (, 56) recognizes, however, we should not underestimate the role of the large numbers of people living in the countryside, who might only come into town occasionally to sell goods at market or to pay taxes but who were nevertheless crucial to the project of urbanism.…”
Section: The Need For Context: Some Complementary Approachesmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…Usually the Cinderella of accounts about towns in Roman Britain, the great majority of the population that continued to live on the land rarely feature as anything other than passive observers, supporters or recipients of urban life. As Revell (, 56) recognizes, however, we should not underestimate the role of the large numbers of people living in the countryside, who might only come into town occasionally to sell goods at market or to pay taxes but who were nevertheless crucial to the project of urbanism.…”
Section: The Need For Context: Some Complementary Approachesmentioning
confidence: 98%
“…Laurence et al . ; Revell ). In this respect, Britain, much of northern France and north‐western Iberia are distinctive in that the provincial landscape here was characterized by a comparatively dispersed pattern of major urban centres interspersed with a far more extensive but patchy network of other smaller nucleated settlements that, to use a phrase of Greg Woolf's,‘displayed a markedly rural character’ (, 143).…”
Section: Urbanism In Roman Britainmentioning
confidence: 99%
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