Javascript must be enabled to continue!
ARCHAEOLOGY AND LATE ANTIQUE SOCIAL STRUCTURES
View through CrossRef
The archaeological remains of late antique sites can be interpreted in terms of what they can tell us about ancient social structures. This is more straightforward when examining the social structures of the upper classes, who possessed the attributes that allow them to be recognised as such. These attributes occur on a Mediterranean-wide basis and include lavishly decorated residences (in both urban and rural environments), monumental funerary structures within churches, splendid garments, precious table wares and implements, and the insignia of rank in the form of jewellery such as gold brooches, fibulae, or belt buckles. The middle class is also traceable in the cities (mostly in the form of craftsmen) and in the countryside, where small landowners and peasants could share similar lifestyles, marked in some regions (such as the Near East and Asia Minor) by conspicuous levels of wealth. However, the lives of these middle classes could change abruptly, casting them into poverty and consequently making them difficult to trace archaeologically. Nonetheless, judicious interpretation of the material remains in tandem with the evidence of documentary and epigraphic sources allows us to make some suggestions as to the social structures of Late Antiquity.
Title: ARCHAEOLOGY AND LATE ANTIQUE SOCIAL STRUCTURES
Description:
The archaeological remains of late antique sites can be interpreted in terms of what they can tell us about ancient social structures.
This is more straightforward when examining the social structures of the upper classes, who possessed the attributes that allow them to be recognised as such.
These attributes occur on a Mediterranean-wide basis and include lavishly decorated residences (in both urban and rural environments), monumental funerary structures within churches, splendid garments, precious table wares and implements, and the insignia of rank in the form of jewellery such as gold brooches, fibulae, or belt buckles.
The middle class is also traceable in the cities (mostly in the form of craftsmen) and in the countryside, where small landowners and peasants could share similar lifestyles, marked in some regions (such as the Near East and Asia Minor) by conspicuous levels of wealth.
However, the lives of these middle classes could change abruptly, casting them into poverty and consequently making them difficult to trace archaeologically.
Nonetheless, judicious interpretation of the material remains in tandem with the evidence of documentary and epigraphic sources allows us to make some suggestions as to the social structures of Late Antiquity.
Related Results
Towards a Prosthetic Archaeology
Towards a Prosthetic Archaeology
Prosthetic archaeology is a theoretical proposal for a materially oriented digital practice. It is based on a critical approach to implementing the latest technologies in archaeolo...
Social archaeology and the theatres of memory
Social archaeology and the theatres of memory
Archaeology is a study of ways in which we express ourselves through the things that we make and use, collect, discard and take for granted, all archaeology is social archaeology. ...
Radical Media Archaeology (its epistemology, aesthetics and case studies)
Radical Media Archaeology (its epistemology, aesthetics and case studies)
Media Archaeology is both a method and an aesthetics of approaching technical objects. Within a broad range of such academic and artistic practices, radical media archaeology will ...
Late Antique Knossos. Understanding the city: evidence of mosaics and religious architecture
Late Antique Knossos. Understanding the city: evidence of mosaics and religious architecture
Interpretation of the historical and epigraphical data can only provide a bare outline of the political and social environment of Knossos between the 5th and 7th centuries AD. Cons...
Archaeology within, archaeology without
Archaeology within, archaeology without
AbstractThe rise of the nation state has had a major influence on the development of archaeology. Nation states today, however, differ from their 19th- and 20th-century equivalents...
Archaeology, Greco-Roman
Archaeology, Greco-Roman
Greco-Roman archaeology is an indispensable source of scholarship for biblical scholars. Those who work in a largely textual discipline benefit from conversation with archaeologist...
LATE ANTIQUE URBAN TOPOGRAPHY: FROM ARCHITECTURE TO HUMAN SPACE
LATE ANTIQUE URBAN TOPOGRAPHY: FROM ARCHITECTURE TO HUMAN SPACE
Writing about the late antique city is dominated by topographical mapping, architectural studies and site syntheses. These approaches operate within a conception of space as the lo...
Two Late-Antique statues from ancient Messene
Two Late-Antique statues from ancient Messene
This article gives a first publication of two late antique statues; it discusses their archaeological context suggesting an appropriate date and tries to place them in their histor...