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Romanization (cultural)

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Romanization may also refer to linguistics; see Romanization.
Romanization was a gradual process of cultural assimilation, in which the conquered "barbarians" (non-Greco-Romans) gradually adopted and largely replaced their own native culture (which in many cases were quite developed, like the culture of the Gauls or Carthage) with the culture of their conquerors - the Romans. The acculturation proceeded from the top down, the upper classes adopting Roman culture first and the old ways lingering longest in outlying districts among peasants; the identification of countryfolk as pagani is discussed at pagan.

Questions Over Validity of Concept

In recent years historians like Greg Woolf have questioned the extent to which Romanization is a useful analytical concept. Woolf sees Romanization as reliant upon the arbitrary allocation of labels such as Roman and Native to various cultural and material elements with little or no firm reasoning to do so. Such thinkers are critical of the dominance Haverfield's The Romanization of Roman Britain have had over the subject and believe it is time for archeological and historical discourse to move on.

Process of romanization

It was a slow and gradual process, taking several decades. First, it began with the military conquest itself. Many times the Romans were invited by local rulers, who either:

After the conquest:

Results of romanization

all this slowly culminated in many gradual cultural developments:

In due time, the conquered would see themselves as Romans.

This process was supported by the Roman Republic and by its successor the Roman Empire.

The entire process was facilitated by the fact that many of the local languages had the same Indo-European origin and by the similarity of the gods of many ancient cultures. They also already had had trade relations and contacts with each other through the seafaring Mediterranean cultures like the Phoenicians and the Greeks.

Romanization was largely effective in the western half of the empire, where native civilization was weaker. In the east, ancient civilizations like those of Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, Judea and Syria, effectively resisted all but its most superficial effects. The most romanized regions of the empire where Italy, the Iberian peninsula, Britain, Gaul, Dalmatia, Dacia, Roman Germania and North Africa, particularly around Carthage. Romanization in some of these regions remains a powerful cultural influence, particularly in those cultures generally described as Latin, in which Romance languages derived from Latin are still spoken.

References

 


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