• Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften - Danuta Shanzer (Hrsg.)

Geistes-, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftlicher Anzeiger

159. Jahrgang 2024
Borders Matter: Rereading the Rhine-Danube Limes and the End of the Roman Empire

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Danuta Shanzer
ist Professorin für lateinische Philologie der Spätantike und des Mittelalters an der Universität Wien


This issue reacts to Alexander Demandt’s fast-paced account of the rise and eventual fall of the Western Roman Empire, a topic of periodically hot political interest. His focus: Germanic barbarians and the Rhine-Danube limes, invasion, conflict, change, and loss (from the Empire’s perspective). The international contributors, primarily ancient historians and adherents of a more peaceable “transformation school,” respond and refine. The volume offers a study of client kingship as a strategy for making the Alamanni “us” rather than “them”. Next, one of the comparatively neglected Upper Rhine limes, following its less dramatic history as a zone of mixed ethnicities, settled by barbarian foederati that eventually became the Second Burgundian Kingdom of the early Middle Ages. An ancient stereotype is re-examined, and Romans may emerge as even more perfidious than barbarians. The joys and perils of narrative history are discussed, and a view from the Eastern Frontier shows how it differed, and why it held, despite raiding. Included are reflections on literary depictions of boundaries and borders, ancient demography, and the role of Christianity as well as a second look at the Rhine-Danube limes through the eyes of the poet and politician Ausonius, who came home from the Rhine limes and also acted as Gratian’s spin-doctor after Adrianople in 378. Migration into Europe casts its shadow over contemporary Roman historiography, and the CDU leadership in Germany tried (unsuccessfully) to suppress an earlier version of Demandt’s contribution in 2015. The volume thus includes a substantial piece on l'affaire Demandt from a modern legal scholar with expertise in Islam. The direct applicability of Roman concerns to present politics is limited, but modern conditions, will to integration, and the respective expectations of host countries and immigrant communities may augur more difficult transformations for modern Europe than for the Western Roman Empire.

Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften
Austrian Academy of Sciences Press
A-1011 Wien, Dr. Ignaz Seipel-Platz 2
Tel. +43-1-515 81/DW 3420, Fax +43-1-515 81/DW 3400
https://verlag.oeaw.ac.at, e-mail: verlag@oeaw.ac.at

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Geistes-, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftlicher Anzeiger
ISSN 2413-5275
Print Edition
ISSN 2413-5569
Online Edition
ISBN 978-3-7001-9697-6
Print Edition
ISBN 978-3-7001-9698-3
Online Edition



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Austrian Academy of Sciences Press
A-1011 Wien, Dr. Ignaz Seipel-Platz 2,
Tel. +43-1-515 81/DW 3420, Fax +43-1-515 81/DW 3400
https://verlag.oeaw.ac.at, e-mail: bestellung.verlag@oeaw.ac.at
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  • Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften - Danuta Shanzer (Hrsg.)

Geistes-, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftlicher Anzeiger

159. Jahrgang 2024
Borders Matter: Rereading the Rhine-Danube Limes and the End of the Roman Empire

  • Geistes-, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftlicher Anzeiger  159 

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This issue reacts to Alexander Demandt’s fast-paced account of the rise and eventual fall of the Western Roman Empire, a topic of periodically hot political interest. His focus: Germanic barbarians and the Rhine-Danube limes, invasion, conflict, change, and loss (from the Empire’s perspective). The international contributors, primarily ancient historians and adherents of a more peaceable “transformation school,” respond and refine. The volume offers a study of client kingship as a strategy for making the Alamanni “us” rather than “them”. Next, one of the comparatively neglected Upper Rhine limes, following its less dramatic history as a zone of mixed ethnicities, settled by barbarian foederati that eventually became the Second Burgundian Kingdom of the early Middle Ages. An ancient stereotype is re-examined, and Romans may emerge as even more perfidious than barbarians. The joys and perils of narrative history are discussed, and a view from the Eastern Frontier shows how it differed, and why it held, despite raiding. Included are reflections on literary depictions of boundaries and borders, ancient demography, and the role of Christianity as well as a second look at the Rhine-Danube limes through the eyes of the poet and politician Ausonius, who came home from the Rhine limes and also acted as Gratian’s spin-doctor after Adrianople in 378. Migration into Europe casts its shadow over contemporary Roman historiography, and the CDU leadership in Germany tried (unsuccessfully) to suppress an earlier version of Demandt’s contribution in 2015. The volume thus includes a substantial piece on l'affaire Demandt from a modern legal scholar with expertise in Islam. The direct applicability of Roman concerns to present politics is limited, but modern conditions, will to integration, and the respective expectations of host countries and immigrant communities may augur more difficult transformations for modern Europe than for the Western Roman Empire.

Authors

Danuta  Shanzer

ist Professorin für lateinische Philologie der Spätantike und des Mittelalters an der Universität Wien

Details

Release date:

2025

ISBN Print Edition

978-3-7001-9697-6

ISBN Online Edition

978-3-7001-9698-3

ISSN Print Edition

2413-5275

ISSN Online Edition

2413-5569

DOI

doi: 10.1553/anzeiger159-1

Pages:

184 Seiten, zahlr. Farbabbildungen, englisch, deutsch, 24x17 cm