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Published 2018
Estudios sobre el África romana : culturas e imaginarios en transformación /

: These collected papers are for those who have their gaze fixed on the fascinating mosaic of cultures that was the North-African world from the moment Rome appeared in the region. Most articles are dedicated to the world of images, but other subjects include Historiography, Archaeology of Architecture, and Libyan-Berber ethnicities.
: Previously issued in print: 2018. : 1 online resource (xvi, 352 pages) : illustrations (black and white, and colour). : Specialized. : 9781784919085 (ebook) :

Published 2019
Rus Africum IV : la fattoria Bizantina di Aïn Wassel, Africa Proconsularis (Alto Tell, Tunisia) : lo scavo stratigrafico e i materiali /

: Aïn Wassel is the only rural site of Africa Proconsularis which has been excavated using the stratigraphic method and the detailed results are published in this volume thanks to an archaeological field survey of the surrounding rural region.
: 1 online resource (xiv, 438 pages) : illustrations (black and white, and colour). : Specialized. : Includes bibliographical references. : 9781789691160 (ebook) :

Published 2008
Inscribing devotion and death : archaeological evidence for Jewish populations of North Africa /

: Reliance on essentialist or syncretistic models of cultural dynamics has limited past evaluations of ancient Jewish populations. This reexamination of evidence for Jews of North Africa offers an alternative approach. Drawing from methods developed in cultural studies and historical linguistics, this book replaces traditional categories used to examine evidence for early Jewish populations and demonstrates how direct comparison of Jewish material evidence with that of its neighbors allows for a reassessment of what the category of "Jewish" might have meant in different North African locations and periods and, by extension, elsewhere in the Mediterranean. The result is a transformed analysis of Jewish cultural identity that both emphasizes its indebtedness to larger regional contexts and allows for a more informed and complex understanding of Jewish cultural distinctiveness.
: 1 online resource (xviii, 342 pages) : illustrations, maps. : Includes bibliographical references (p. 315-334) and index. : 9789047423843 : 0927-7633 ; : Available to subscribing member institutions only.

Published 2012
Staying Roman : conquest and identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439-700 /

: "In 416, when preaching a sermon on the psalms in late Roman Carthage, Augustine was able to ask his audience, 'Who now knows which nations in the Roman empire were what, when all have become Romans, and all are called Romans?'1 Yet already by the time Augustine addressed his Carthaginian audience the continued unity of the Roman Mediterranean was being called into question. The defeat and death of the Roman emperor Valens at Adrianople in 378 had set the stage for a new phase of conflict between the empire and its non-Roman neighbours ; and over the course of the fifth century Roman power collapsed in the West, where it was succeeded by a number of sub-Roman kingdoms. Questions that had seemed trivial to Augustine were suddenly and painfully alive : what did it mean to be 'Roman' in the changed circumstances of the fifth and later centuries? And (from a twenty-first-century perspective) what became of the idea of Romanness in the West once Roman power collapsed?"--
"What did it mean to be Roman once the Roman Empire had collapsed in the West? Staying Roman examines Roman identities in the region of modern Tunisia and Algeria between the fifth-century Vandal conquest and the seventh-century Islamic invasions. Using historical, archaeological and epigraphic evidence, this study argues that the fracturing of the empire's political unity also led to a fracturing of Roman identity along political, cultural and religious lines, as individuals who continued to feel 'Roman' but who were no longer living under imperial rule sought to redefine what it was that connected them to their fellow Romans elsewhere. The resulting definitions of Romanness could overlap, but were not always mutually reinforcing. Significantly, in late antiquity Romanness had a practical value, and could be used in remarkably flexible ways to foster a sense of similarity or difference over space, time and ethnicity, in a wide variety of circumstances"--
: Revision of the author's thesis (Ph. D.)--Harvard University, 2004, entitled: Staying Roman : Vandals, Moors, and Byzantines in late antique North Africa, 400-700. : xviii, 438 pages : illustrations, maps ; 25 cm. : Includes bibliographical references (pages 379-419) and index. : 9780521196970

Published 2009
Römische Villen in Nordafrika : Untersuchungen zu Architektur und Wirtschaftsweise /

: 133 pages : illustrations, maps ; 30 cm. : Includes bibliographical references. : 1407305883
9781407305882