Bild

‘Römisch-germanische Grenzpolitik’: Events, Resonances, and Contributions Introduction

    Danuta Shanzer

Geistes-, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftlicher Anzeiger, 159. Jahrgang 2024, pp. 5-32, 2025/04/16

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

doi: 10.1553/anzeiger159-1s5

€  89,00 

incl. VAT

PDF
X
BibTEX-Export:

X
EndNote/Zotero-Export:

X
RIS-Export:

X 
Researchgate-Export (COinS)

Permanent QR-Code

doi:10.1553/anzeiger159-1s5

Abstract

The publication history of Alexander Demandt’s work on “Römisch-germanische Grenzpolitik” refects our continuing fascination with the end of the Roman Empire, a topic with rich literary sources and an inherent capacity to hold up a mirror to its historians. All explanations refect their authors’ own times and troubles. The original core of Demandt’s contribution became controversial in 2015, but is arguably even more so now in 2024. His “mover” approach emphasized barbarian invasions and the transgression of borders. After invoking a sample of modern literary and scholarly imaginings of the northwestern limes, the introduction revisits some of Demandt’s themes, including Roman and the barbarian birthrates, walls, and the role of Christianity. The contributors’ articles are then contextualized and discussed individually. They concentrate on the Upper-Rhine limes (Hächler), client kings among the Alemanni (Mathisen), a case for the good faith of barbarians (Wijnendaele), the vulnerabilities of narratives (Liccardo), the quite diferent situation on the eastern frontier (Sarantis), and the embedding of Demandt’s work in the contemporary politics of migration in Germany (Afsah)

Keywords: end of the Roman Empire; borders; barbarians; historiography; literary reception