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Corsi e ricorsi storici or Why We Can’t Stop Obsessing About the Fall of Rome

    Salvatore Liccardo

Geistes-, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftlicher Anzeiger, 159. Jahrgang 2024, pp. 91-100, 2025/04/16

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

doi: 10.1553/anzeiger159-1s91

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doi:10.1553/anzeiger159-1s91

Abstract

By presenting a ‘traditional’ interpretation of the role of barbarians and imperial borders, the lecture of Alexander Demandt entitled “Römisch-germanische Grenzpolitik” provides a learned, attractive, and quite convincing narrative of the fall of the Roman Empire. My contribution expands on a few aspects of Demandt’s lecture and aims to highlight how the historian’s interpretation of the fall of Rome fts within the contemporary academic and public debates about borders and migration.

Keywords: the fall of Rome; Late Antiquity; barbarian migrations; historiography; uses of the past