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Creolised Bodies and Hybrid Identities : Examining the Early Roman Period in Essex and Hertfordshire

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Oxbow says: To what extent did the indigenous population change their appearance and identity with the arrival of the Romans?

Gillian Carr's revised thesis explores how we can detect shifts in modes of physical appearance and social identity by stuyding evidence from around 40 sites in Essex and Hertfordshire.

Her study looks at artefacts traditionally symbolic of 'Romanisation', such as brooches, hairpins and other hair accoutrements, toilet instruments, and pigment and cosmetic pounders representing body tattooing and painting.

Carr acknowledges that the link between artefacts and ethnicity or identity is somewhat problematic, especially with regard to differentiating between 'native' and Roman, although she does reach some interesting conclusions about the increased fluidity of identities in the late Iron Age, increased experimentation and attempts at social mobility through physical appearance.

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£33.30 Save 10.00%
RRP £37.00
Product Details
BAR Publishing
1841717541 / 9781841717548
Paperback / softback
31/12/2006
United Kingdom
154 pages
210 x 297 mm, 614 grams