Fr. 149.00

Travel in the Roman Mind

English · Hardback

Will be released 31.12.2023

Description

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List of contents

1. Dreams of travel 2. Why not to travel, or not far 3. Thoughts for departing travelers 4. Regular experiences of travel 5. Travelers’ aids and souvenirs 6. Commerce 7. Officialdom 8. Pleasure 9. Exile 10. Exploration 11. Religion 12. Human disruption 13. Natural disruption 14. Time-travel

Summary

Travel in the Roman Mind presents a broad spectrum of travel experiences in the Roman world from the Republic to the Late Empire. The sources reveal both the nature of travellers’ real-world interactions with humans and landscapes and the challenges of all kinds that travellers faced as well as travels imagined in dreams and fiction, as well as reflections on the very idea and value of travel. The varied impact – from transformative to very negative – that travel can make upon the entire mentalité of individuals and even of a people gradually emerges.
Assembling very dispersed ancient evidence, long passages provide the reader with opportunities to evaluate how travel shaped and changed Romans’ outlook over several centuries. Notes and commentaries provide context allowing readers to understand the spatial dynamics of Roman culture and how travel sits in the broad picture of Roman life. This is the first collection of primary sources on the growing subject of travel in the ancient world and will be indispensable for students of Roman culture.
This volume presents a broad spectrum of travel experiences in the Roman world from the Republic to the Late Empire. The sources reveal both the nature of travellers’ real-world interactions with humans and landscapes and the challenges that travellers faced, as well as travels imagined in dreams and fiction, and reflections on the very idea and value of travel. Assembling very dispersed ancient evidence, long passages provide the reader with opportunities to evaluate how travel shaped and changed Romans’ outlook over several centuries. Notes and commentaries provide context allowing readers to understand the spatial dynamics of Roman culture and how travel sits in the broad picture of Roman life. This is the first collection of primary sources on the growing subject of travel in the ancient world and will be indispensable for students of Roman culture.

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