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‘Römisch-germanische Grenzpolitik’: A Response from an Eastern Roman Perspective, 4th-7th Centuries

    Alexander Sarantis

Geistes-, sozial- und kulturwissenschaftlicher Anzeiger, 159. Jahrgang 2024, pp. 101-117, 2025/04/16

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

doi: 10.1553/anzeiger159-1s101

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doi:10.1553/anzeiger159-1s101

Abstract

This essay responds to three points made by Alexander Demandt’s lecture on Roman-Germanic frontier relations: that an imbalance between economically weaker Germanic groups and the wealthier Roman Empire underpinned the dynamics of frontier politics; that the frontiers were linear barriers to movement; that the Germans ultimately defeated the Roman emperors and brought down the western Roman Empire. It draws on examples from the eastern Roman Empire to argue that the Romans also beneftted from and exploited the resources of the barbarian world, that frontiers were multi-cultural and syncretic zones of interaction; and that the northern frontiers of the Western and Eastern Empires ultimately collapsed because the imperial governments withdrew from these regions to focus their efforts on military threats and political crises in other areas