Safe in their homes? Reflections on defending towns and populations in northern Italy, AD 350-450
chapter
posted on 2015-01-22, 15:17authored byNeil J. Christie
Italy in the Theodosian Age was a territory under threat. From usurpers through to Attila the textual
sources signify how war and insecurity had reached the very heart of the Empire. A changed military,
a changed capital, and changing enemies forced Italy to take on an increasingly militarised guise.
This paper outlines and reflects on the physical and archaeological guides for all this in terms of
frontiers and towns. Are the manifestations of change and insecurity general or specific? How secure
did Italy look in the early fifth century AD? Were urban populations particularly affected? And what
can we learn of their attitudes to the walls that girded them?
History
Citation
Christie, NJ, Safe in their homes? Reflections on defending towns and populations in northern Italy, AD 350-450, ed. García-Gasco, R;González Sánchez, S, 'The Theodosian Age (AD 379-455): Power, Place, Belief and Learning in the Last Century of the Western Empire', 2493, Archaeopress, 2013, pp. 123-131 (9)
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF ARTS, HUMANITIES AND LAW/School of Archaeology and Ancient History