The Roman Object Revolution
Objectscapes and Intra-Cultural Connectivity in Northwest Europe
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Amsterdam University Press
Published:3rd Dec '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Archaeologists working in northwest Europe have long remarked on the sheer quantity and standardisation of objects unearthed from the Roman period, especially compared with earlier eras. What was the historical significance of this boom in standardised objects? With a wide and ever-changing spectrum of innovative objects and styles to choose from, to what extent did the choices made by people in the past really matter? To answer these questions, this book sheds new light on the make-up of late Iron Age and early Roman ‘objectscapes’, through an examination of the circulation and selections of thousands of standardised pots, brooches, and other objects, with emphasis on funerary repertoires, c. 100 bc-ad 100. Breaking with the national frameworks that inform artefact research in much ‘provincial’ Roman archaeology, the book tests the idea that marked increases in the movement of people and objects fostered pan-regional culture(s) and transformed societies. Using a rich database of cemeteries and settlements spanning a swathe of northwest Europe, including southern Britannia, Gallia Belgica, and Germania Inferior, the study extensively applies multivariate statistics (such as Correspondence Analysis) to examine the roles of objects in an ever-changing and richly complex cultural milieu.
"Pitts’ study of more than 80,000 contextualized artefacts from over 100 sites across the Roman North-West, takes discussion of the transformation of material culture en masse to a new level. Pitts skilfully develops an interpretation that does justice to the micro-level of site specific activity, to the macro-level of globalization theory, never losing site of his empirical analysis. This books is without doubt a game-changer." - Greg Woolf, Director of the Institute of Classical Studies, The School of Advanced Study, London "This is an important and innovative work that addresses key issues in the understanding of the development of Roman provincial cultures, deploying contemporary theoretical perspectives yet also engaging in detail with the archaeological material. It makes a very significant contribution both to the particular historical period and to methodology." - Martin Millett, Laurence Professor of Classical Archaeology & Head of the School of Arts and Humanities, University of Cambridge
ISBN: 9789463728201
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
260 pages