Geistes-, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftlicher Anzeiger, 159. Jahrgang 2024, pp. 45-60, 2025/04/16
159. Jahrgang 2024
Borders Matter: Rereading the Rhine-Danube Limes and the End of the Roman Empire
This article examines the later Roman Upper Rhine Limes between Lake Constance and Basel as a borderline region with a liminal character situated between the centres of power of Rome and Barbaricum. As a border defence system, the section of the Limes examined here served both to keep the peace and to wage war, as a study of imperial activities in the 4th and 5th centuries shows. Taking literary and documentary evidence into account, it becomes clear that the living environment of the local population changed fundamentally over the course of time. Roman administration, Christian religion and church structures as well as Gallo-Roman and Germanic culture subsequently formed the basis for new ways of life in the early medieval societies of what is now Switzerland.
Keywords: Alamanni; Constantine I; Constantius II; Julian; Valentinian I; Burgundians