Investigating Identities in Late Antiquity: A Case Study of the Roman Weapons Burial Deposit from the Sintrivani Basilica in Thessaloniki

IF 0.3 3区 历史学 0 MEDIEVAL & RENAISSANCE STUDIES
Errikos Maniotis
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract: The identification of “peoples” is the oldest purpose that the study of burial rites has been made to serve. Written sources tell us that in late antiquity different peoples migrated into the Roman Empire, both in the Western and in the Eastern half. Cemetery archaeology provides one of the most important sources for early medieval social history. Weapon deposits should not be excluded from this process. The current paper investigates the armament of a soldier’s burial found in a grave attached to the so-called Sintrivani Basilica in Thessaloniki, Greece, dated to the early fifth century CE and how the study of arms and armor combined with other archaeological findings could help us to explore identities in late antiquity. The most interesting weapon of the deceased from the whole hoard is the sword that had been found bent. This striking and critical feature led me to correlate it with the ritual of “killing a weapon.” The bent sword expresses complex social statements about status and identity and functions as a clue that the soldier was a “Romanized” Goth or from another Germanic tribe who served as a mercenary (foederatus) in the imperial Roman forces. Considering the importance of the burial location, it is also clear that the deceased was a high-ranking officer of the Roman army.
调查古代晚期的身份:以塞萨洛尼基Sintrivani Basilica的罗马武器埋葬沉积物为例
摘要:对“民族”的识别是墓葬研究最古老的目的。书面资料告诉我们,在古代晚期,不同的民族迁移到罗马帝国,包括在西半部和东半部。墓地考古学为中世纪早期社会历史提供了最重要的资料来源之一。不应将武器储藏排除在这一进程之外。目前的论文调查了在希腊塞萨洛尼基所谓的辛特里瓦尼大教堂的坟墓中发现的一名士兵的埋葬武器,该坟墓可追溯到公元5世纪初,以及对武器和盔甲的研究与其他考古发现如何帮助我们探索古代晚期的身份。在整个宝藏中,死者最有趣的武器是那把被发现弯曲的剑。这一引人注目的关键特征使我将其与“杀死武器”的仪式联系起来。弯曲的剑表达了关于地位和身份的复杂社会陈述,并作为线索表明士兵是“罗马化”的哥特人或来自另一个日耳曼部落,在罗马帝国军队中担任雇佣兵(foederatus)。考虑到埋葬地点的重要性,死者显然是罗马军队的高级军官。
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来源期刊
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期刊介绍: Comitatus: A Journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies publishes articles by graduate students and recent PhDs in any field of medieval and Renaissance studies. The journal maintains a tradition of gathering work from across disciplines, with a special interest in articles that have an interdisciplinary or cross-cultural scope.
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