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Roman Military Archaeology

Roman military archaeology studies the forts, frontiers, equipment, and supply systems of the Roman army, and the impact of the military on the landscapes and societies of the empire.

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Definition

The archaeological study of the Roman army's installations, equipment, frontiers, and its impact on provincial society and landscape.

Scope

This topic covers the physical remains of the Roman military: legionary fortresses, auxiliary forts, frontier works such as Hadrian's Wall and the German limes, camps, and the army's equipment and logistics. It examines how the military was organized and supplied, how frontiers were constructed and functioned, and how the presence of soldiers shaped local economies, settlement, and cultural change in the provinces.

Core questions

  • How were Roman forts and fortresses designed and organized?
  • How did Roman frontier systems function militarily and economically?
  • What does surviving equipment reveal about the army and its supply?
  • How did the military presence transform provincial communities?

Key theories

Frontiers as systems, not just barriers
The interpretation of Roman frontiers such as Hadrian's Wall as integrated systems for surveillance, movement control, and administration rather than purely defensive walls.
Military supply and economic impact
The view that the army's demand for food, equipment, and materials stimulated production, trade, and settlement around military bases, integrating the military into provincial economies.

History

The systematic study of Roman military sites developed strongly along the frontiers, particularly in Britain and Germany, with long-running excavation of forts and frontier works such as Hadrian's Wall. Research has expanded from the typology of forts and equipment to the social archaeology of military communities and the economic role of the army.

Debates

Purpose of Roman frontiers
Scholars debate whether frontier systems were primarily defensive lines, instruments of control over movement and trade, or symbolic expressions of imperial power.

Key figures

  • David Breeze
  • M. C. Bishop
  • J. C. N. Coulston
  • Brian Campbell

Related topics

Seminal works

  • bishopcoulston2006
  • breeze2011
  • campbell2002

Frequently asked questions

What was the Roman limes?
The limes was the frontier zone of the Roman Empire, marked in places by walls, forts, watchtowers, and roads that controlled movement and defended or defined the empire's edge.
What can Roman military equipment tell archaeologists?
Surviving arms, armor, and fittings help date sites, trace the movements and supply of units, and illuminate the organization and identity of the Roman army.

Methods for this concept

Related concepts