
Cadastres, Misconceptions & Northern Gaul : A case study from the Belgian Hesbaye region.
Title:
Cadastres, Misconceptions & Northern Gaul : A case study from the Belgian Hesbaye region.
Author:
Bonnie, Rick.
ISBN:
9789088901324
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (169 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- List ofIllustrations -- Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- 1 Introduction -- A static concept? -- Evidence for surveyors -- 2 Setting and Physical Geography -- Physical geography -- 3 Historical and Archaeological Framework -- Late Iron Age (250 - 57 BC) -- Early Roman Period -- Middle Roman Period (70 - 270 AD) -- Late Roman Period (270 - 450 AD) -- 4 Studying Roman Cadastres -- Aerial photography and maps -- Regional research in Northern Gaul -- Region around Tongres -- Dutch province of Limburg -- German Rhineland -- 5 Talus and Site Orientation -- Theory -- Methodology -- Orientation of talus and Roman structures -- 6 Site Distribution and Land Sizes -- Site distribution -- Calculating hypothetical land sizes -- 7 Ownership of Land and Villas -- Cadastres and the supposed settlement of new people -- Relationship between villas and cadastres -- Development of the villa landscape -- 8 Conclusions -- A Roman cadastre in the Tongres-Maastricht area -- Dating the cadastre -- The cadastre's size -- Socio-cultural impact -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Catalogue.
Abstract:
A Roman cadastre is a particular form of land allotment which looks like a chequerboard. It was implemented by the Romans in regions throughout the Empire, from Syria to Gaul. Yet, how did a Roman cadastre exactly look like? What has Roman cadastration in common with centuriatio and parcellation, and what not? Are aerial photographs and maps a reliable source to reveal traces of a Roman cadastre? Did Roman cadastres exist outside the Mediterranean region, and if so, what are the consequences of its existence on a socio-cultural level? Behind these apparently straightforward questions are for most scholars simple definitive answers. On the basis of these answers scholars have regarded the archaeological study of Roman cadastres often as optimistic, biased and even unscientific. In Cadastres, Misconceptions and Northern Gaul Rick Bonnie argues that during the Middle-Roman period a cadastre was implemented by the Romans around the provincial Roman city of Tongres. In contrast to general beliefs, Bonnie demonstrates that it is possible, using aerial photographs and maps, to reconstruct a landscape outside the Mediterranean region that was overlain by a Roman cadastre. It furthermore discusses and examines the history of research, historical and archaeological sources on Roman cadastres, as well as the Roman period of the Belgian Hesbaye region. Rick Bonnie studied Classical Archaeology at Leiden University (MA cum laude 2008). His thesis was awarded the W. A. van Es-prize by the Dutch Institute for Cultural Heritage and was nominated for the Leiden University thesis prize 2007-2008.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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