Investigating migration and mobility in the Early Roman frontier. The case of the Batavi in the Dutch Rhine delta (c. 50/30 BC–AD 40)

  • Diederick Habermehl (Author)
    Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
  • Julie Van Kerckhove (Author)
  • Nico Roymans (Author)
    Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
  • Lisette Kootker (Author)
    Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
  • Gerard Boreel (Author)
  • Dennis Braekmans (Author)
    Leiden University
    https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6335-0521
  • Stijn Heeren (Author)
    Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam

Identifiers (Article)

Abstract

The study of migration is essential for understanding the earliest phases of the Roman period in the Lower Rhine delta. This paper applies an integrated and interdisciplinary approach, combining and comparing historical, archaeological and science-based evidence and methodologies, allowing a more detailed reconstruction of immigration during this period. Our study suggests that various groups migrated to our region, probably over a longer period of time, originating from different regions and arriving in a land with a (probably limited) residual population. This marked and varied immigration should be understood in the context of Roman frontier policy and the (ethnic) recruitment of Germanic groups by the Roman military.

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Published
2023-08-15
Language
en
Keywords
migration, interdisciplinary approach, Early Roman period , pottery, house architecture, literary sources, ethnogenesis