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Migration, Mobility and Place in Ancient Italy

Migration, Mobility and Place in Ancient Italy

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Elena Isayev
Cambridge University Press, 8/31/2017
EAN 9781107130616, ISBN10: 1107130611

Hardcover, 542 pages, 26.1 x 18.4 x 3 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

Migration, Mobility and Place in Ancient Italy challenges prevailing conceptions of a natural tie to the land and a demographically settled world. It argues that much human mobility in the last millennium BC was ongoing and cyclical. In particular, outside the military context 'the foreigner in our midst' was not regarded as a problem. Boundaries of status rather than of geopolitics were those difficult to cross. The book discusses the stories of individuals and migrant groups, traders, refugees, expulsions, the founding and demolition of sites, and the political processes that could both encourage and discourage the transfer of people from one place to another. In so doing it highlights moments of change in the concepts of mobility and the definitions of those on the move. By providing the long view from history, it exposes how fleeting are the conventions that take shape here and now.

Part I
1. Introduction
2. Statistical uncertainties
mobility in the last 250 years BC
Part II
3. Routeways, kinship and storytelling
4. Mixed communities
mobility, connectivity and co-presence
5. Why choose to come together and move apart? Convergence and redistribution of people and power
Part III
6. Plautus on mobility of the every-day
7. Polybius on mobility and a comedy of The Hostage Prince
8. Polybius on the moving masses and those who moved them
Part IV
9. Social war
reconciling differences of place and citizenship
10. Mapping the moving Rome of Livy's Camillus speech
11. Materialising Rome and Patria
12. Conclusion
everyday and unpredictable mobility
Appendices A, B and C. Mobility in Plautus
Appendix D. Livy's Camillus Speech and translation.