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100 1  Roymans, Nico. 
245 10 Ethnic identity and imperial power :|bthe Batavians in the
       early Roman empire /|cNico Roymans. 
264  1 Amsterdam :|bAmsterdam University Press,|c[2004] 
264  4 |c©2004 
300    1 online resource (1 volume) :|billustrations. 
336    text|btxt|2rdacontent 
337    computer|bc|2rdamedia 
338    online resource|bcr|2rdacarrier 
490 1  Amsterdam archaeological studies ;|v10 
504    Includes bibliographical references and index. 
505 00 |g1.|tResearch aims, central concepts and perspectives.
       |tThe study of ethnicity and ethnogenesis --|tRoman 
       imperial power and the ethnic dynamics in the Lower Rhine 
       frontier --|tEthnicity, texts and material culture. 
       Methodological considerations --|tStructure of the text --
       |g2.|tSocial change in the Late Iron Age Lower Rhine 
       region.|tThe adoption of coinage --|tThe emergence of 
       regional sanctuaries --|tThe development of a major 
       nucleated settlement at Kessel/Lith --|tThe mass 
       circulation of glass bracelets --|tDiscussion. A new kind 
       of society in the Lower Rhine region? --|g3.|tCaesar's 
       conquest and the ethnic reshuffling of the Lower Rhine 
       frontier zone.|tMajor changes in the tribal map after the 
       Roman conquest --|tArchaeological discussion on continuity
       and discontinuity of habitation in the Rhine delta in the 
       later 1st century BC --|tThe Lower Rhine population and 
       their presumed Germanic ethnicity --|g4.|tThe gold 
       triskeles coinages of the Eburones.|tLate Iron Age coin 
       circulation in the Lower Rhine region --|tThe triskeles 
       Scheers 31 type coins: typology, metrology, and 
       distribution --|tChronology and the problem of historical 
       interpretation --|tAscription to the Eburones and the link
       to Caesar's conquest --|tPatterns of deposition and loss: 
       the archaeological contexts --|gAppendix 4.1. List of 
       'imported' gold staters found in the Lower Rhine region --
       |gAppendix:|tDescriptive list of the Scheers 31 triskeles 
       coins --|g5.|tRoman frontier politics and the formation of
       a Batavian polity.|tThe roots of the alliance between the 
       Romans and Batavians --|tOn the role of a king --|tFrom 
       kingship to magistrature --|g6.|tThe Lower Rhine 
       triquetrum coinages and the formation of a Batavian 
       polity.|tDistribution, classification and chronology of 
       the Lower Rhine triquetrum coinages --|tBatavian 
       emissions? --|tProduction, circulation and deposition of 
       triquetrum coinages in the Batavian river area. Some 
       Hypotheses --|gAppendix:|tList of sites where triquetrum 
       coins have been found --|g7.|tKessel/Lith. A Late Iron Age
       central place in the Rhine/Meuse delta.|tDredged from sand
       and gravel. History of the finds, the find circumstances, 
       and representativity --|tDescription of the find complex -
       -|tThe Meuse/Waal river junction at Kessel /Lith in the 
       Late Iron Age and Early Roman period --|tSettlement, cult 
       place or battlefield? Interpretation of the find complex 
       at Kessel/Lith --|tA monumental Roman temple at Kessel --
       |tGrinnes and Vada --|tThe Kessel/Lith settlement from a 
       Northwest-European perspective --|tKessel/Lith as a centre
       of power and a key place in the construction of a Batavian
       identity group --|gAppendix:|tDescriptive catalogue of the
       metal finds dredged at Kessel/Lith --|g8.|tThe political 
       and institutional structure of the pre-Flavian civitas 
       Batavorum.|tRoman imperialism and the control of tribal 
       groups in the Germanic frontier --|tThe municipalisation 
       of the civitas Batavorum --|tNijmegen as a central place -
       -|tThe pre-Flavian civitas Batavorum and its relation to 
       coastal tribes in the Rhine/Meuse delta --|tCivitas 
       organisation and Batavian identity --|g9.|tFoederis Romani
       monumenta. Public memorials of the alliance with Rome.
       |tThe marble head of Julius Caesar from Nijmegen --|tThe 
       Tiberius column from Nijmegen --|tA fragment of an 
       imperial tabula patronatus from Escharen --|tDiscussion --
       |g10.|tImage and self-image of the Batavians.|tThe Roman 
       army and the cultivation of a Batavian identity --
       |tDominant Roman images of the Batavians --|tDominant 
       elements in the self-image of Batavians --|g11.|tHercules 
       and the construction of a Batavian identity in the context
       of the Roman empire.|tIntroduction. Myth, history and the 
       construction of collective identities --|tEvidence for 
       Trojan foundation myths in Gaul and Britain --|tHercules 
       as the first civiliser of the Germanic frontier --|tThe 
       cult of Hercules among the Batavians --|tThe appeal of the
       Roman Hercules and the construction of a Batavian identity
       --|tThe Hercules sanctuaries and their significance for 
       the construction of a Batavian identity<--|tOn the 
       Hercules cult in the other civitates of Lower Germany --
       |tDiscussion --|g12.|tConclusion and epilogue.|tThe 
       ethnogenesis of the Batavians. A summary --|tFrom a 
       Batavian people to a Roman civitas? --|tThe case of the 
       Batavians and ethnogenetic theory. 
506    |3Use copy|fRestrictions unspecified|2star|5MiAaHDL 
520    An empirically-based analysis of the emergence of the 
       Batavian ethnicity within the Roman Empire. 
533    Electronic reproduction.|b[S.l.] :|cHathiTrust Digital 
       Library,|d2010.|5MiAaHDL 
538    Master and use copy. Digital master created according to 
       Benchmark for Faithful Digital Reproductions of Monographs
       and Serials, Version 1. Digital Library Federation, 
       December 2002.|uhttp://purl.oclc.org/DLF/benchrepro0212
       |5MiAaHDL 
546    English. 
583 1  digitized|c2010|hHathiTrust Digital Library|lcommitted to 
       preserve|2pda|5MiAaHDL 
588 0  Print version record. 
648  7 To 1384|2fast 
650  0 Batavi (Germanic people)|xEthnic identity. 
650  0 Excavations (Archaeology)|zNetherlands. 
650  0 Romans|zNetherlands. 
650  0 Batavi (Germanic people) 
650  7 HISTORY|xAncient|xGeneral.|2bisacsh 
650  7 Humanities.|2bicssc 
650  7 History.|2bicssc 
650  7 History: specific events and topics.|2bicssc 
650  7 Archaeology.|2bicssc 
650  7 Antiquities.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00810745 
650  7 Excavations (Archaeology)|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst00917564 
650  7 Romans.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01100116 
650  7 Netherlands, Belgium & Luxembourg.|2hilcc 
650  7 Regions & Countries|xEurope.|2hilcc 
650  7 History & Archaeology.|2hilcc 
651  0 Netherlands|xHistory|yTo 1384. 
651  0 Rome|xHistory|yEmpire, 30 B.C.-476 A.D. 
651  0 Netherlands|xAntiquities. 
650 17 Etnisch bewustzijn.|2gtt 
650 17 Bataven.|2gtt 
650 17 Archeologische vondsten.|2gtt 
650 17 Romeinse oudheid.|2gtt 
651  7 Netherlands.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01204034 
651  7 Rome (Empire)|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01204885 
653  0 Multi-User. 
655  0 Electronic books. 
655  7 History.|2fast|0(OCoLC)fst01411628 
776 08 |iPrint version:|aRoymans, Nico.|tEthnic identity and 
       imperial power.|dAmsterdam : Amsterdam University Press, 
       ©2004|z9053567054|w(OCoLC)56652609 
830  0 Amsterdam archaeological studies ;|v10. 
914    ocm58538163 
994    92|bCKE 
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