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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
28 of 29 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
unroman stuff,
By
This review is from: Unroman Britain (Hardcover)
I`ve read the reviews and the book too and my opinion is quite different. The book is a logical piece in Laycock`s books on how Britain fell into pieces along the lines of the tribal areas. Tribalism was strong throughout the roman period which is how this was possible. If tribalism was so strong then Britain can`t really have been very Roman, which is where this book fits into the set, but this whole myth the book promises to expose is not a myth, at least not in 2010. This argument that Roman Britain wasn`t so Roman at all is hardly new. Richard Reece came up with this more than 20 years ago and if you`ve read Mattingly`s excellent `An Imperial Possession, Britain in the Roman Empire`(2006), you`ll be surprised what this whole `wow, Laycock and Russell got it right` enthusiasm is about. Mattingly`s book is a difficult read, but you can find all the `most people lived in round houses`, `urbanism was a failure` etc. mantra there.It`s interesting to note how the coin legend `RSR` `Satrunian Age returns` is interpreted as a message to the British subjects of Carausius (p.151). The legend I.N.P.C.D.A. (deciphered by Bedoyere) is somehow left out of the book. It stands for `Iam Nova Progenies Caelo Demittitur Alto` `now a generation is let down from heaven above`. My point is that since these are from Vergil`s Eclogue IV, I wonder how these unroman guys were able to understand the message? I can`t picture a Celtic-British lad reading Virgil in front of his round house. Unless you had proper Latin education these letters on the coins meant nothing to you and then of course the question `Who were these messages for?` springs to mind. Probably not the round house dwellers and if not then how can these coins lead you to the conclusion that Carausius was a British ruler? I wanted to check the very rare coins the book mentions, but there are no footnotes. Improper footnoting is a problem throughout the book. The argument is heavily weighted on the section on `non-villa` sites (pp. 119-129) referring to finds of several excavations without a single footnote. I`m sure what they conclude is correct, but if this is meant to be a kind of academic piece there should be footnotes, or a bibliography for each chapter. But most of this is probably not so important for those who meet Roman Britain for the first time. The book is easy to follow, beautifully illustrated which is forward looking and the general reader will find it very interesting. A perfect present for sb who is interested in Roman history.
56 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A valuable "anti-history",
By E. L. Wisty "If you hear about C. P. Snow exp... (Devon, UK) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
This review is from: Unroman Britain (Hardcover)
Miles Russell (Bloodline: The Celtic Kings of Roman Britain) and Stuart Laycock (Britannia - The Failed State: Tribal Conflict and the End of Roman Britain & Warlords: The Struggle for Power in Post-Roman Britain) have joined forces here in a new work. Whereas their previous works are rather more for the specialist and enthusiastic amateur, this volume appears to be aimed a little more towards the general reader, with the text appealing less to detailed technical argument and also incorporating more photographs and reconstruction illustrations.Russell & Laycock argue that the Roman province of Britannia was far less Romanised than is commonly regarded. The "sexy" history which we always hear about concentrates entirely on the few; but villas for example should really be compared to grand 18th century stately homes, hardly representative of the majority of Britons who were still living in poky Iron Age roundhouses. The masses were unwilling participants in all this who took the opportunity to throw off Roman governance and indeed all the trappings of Roman civilisation during the troubles of the early fifth century. The ideas of Laycock's earlier works are incorporated and reiterated here, namely that the tribal rivalries of Iron Age Britain were never fully suppressed during the Roman period and resurfaced again at this time, and that archaeological analysis of military style belt buckles apparently entering civilian use suggests the rise of militias to replace the regular army. This contention of a rejection of Rome requires an accompanying argument of how a large part of Britain became Anglicised thereafter - for if Britain defied permanent Romanisation over four centuries and was rapidly de-Romanised, how could Anglo-Saxon culture take over so quickly and easily and permanently? This was one of my criticisms of Jones' otherwise excellent The End of Roman Britain which also argued for rejection of Roman civilisation at this time but ignored this question. Russell and Laycock at least understand and acknowledge this problem, but I'm not sure that they resolve it here however. (See also Snyder's An Age of Tyrants: Britain and the Britons, AD 400-600 and Faulkner's The Decline and Fall of Roman Britain for other works arguing similarly for an active throwing off of Roman governance.) Nevertheless this is a great book, beginning to redress the balance of our views on Roman Britain. Thank you Miles and Stuart, and more power to your pens.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Rome and the British identity,
By
This review is from: Unroman Britain (Hardcover)
As a avid reader of history books, the best books are always ones like this which fire up your imagination and pose more questions that answers. Despite my initial misgivings whereby Laycock and Russell compare the Roman conquest of Britain to the recent attempts to bring "democracy" to Iraq and Afghanistan, this book makes the argument that Roman culture was never fully embraced in Britannia and that the tribal / Celtic culture endured long enough to enable the Saxon and other European invaders who settled from the 5th Century onwards to be more readily absorbed as their own culture was not so far removed from these later conquerors. Indeed, the now acknowledged notion that the Saxons did not enthinically cleanse the Britona but rather the two cultures tended to merge forms the conclusion of this book after making refrence to the historian Gildas.However, this book is at it's best when considering the fate of the colony during the second half of Rome's occupation. One of the most fascinating aspects was the fact that Britannia seemed to be a hotbed of political rebellion which the fact that the large military presence needed to control the province led to governors being appointed who frequently had Imperial ambitions. Whilst the story of Constantine's departure from York to become Emperor is well known, this was not the first occasion that Britannia's military might had venture into Europe. For instance, I never appreciated that the British commander Clodius Albinus had invaded Gaul with a 150,000 strong army only to be defeated by the Emperor Septimus Severus outside Lyons, a "Roman" city with which I am very familiar. This book cotinues to explore the rebellious nature of Britannia and how the colony even became part of an alternative Empire that opposed Rome. Backing the records up with archaeological evidence, an unfamiliar story of Rome's involvement emerges and I was gripped by the narrative which went well beyond the usual accounts of Boudicca, the constructions of villas and Hadrian's wall which is the usual stereotype historians fall back on for this era. Whilst this is a relatively slim volume, the information is very densely packed and the authors present a lot of information to take in. Granted that there isn't a great deal of recorded information about this era, the account presented by the authors covers a wide range of topis from religion, construction, industry and the rise and fall of urban development prior to the departure of the Romans in 410. It was staggering to discover too that how a change in dress sense is evident from the discovery of belt buckles and why this might suggest an increased militarisation of the country that reflects the increasing political instability as the period progressed. The authors point out that the life styles of the Romano-British is almost certainly under-represented in the archaeological record and that a truer picture of this era may have been of a pioneer, frontier country where the trappings of the Imperial conquest were perhaps embraced only tentatively. In summary, this is a difficult book to put down and one which is lavishly illustrated with some very impressive photographs and drawings. Although it will always remain impossible to verify the argument that is presented in this book, it is a hugely attractive vision. All too often, our preception of the Romans in Britain is over-simplified and I feel this book goes a very long way in presenting an alternative which seems to me to be far more credible. I think that this book's strength is also indicative of the fact that these arguments now need to be looked at in the far broader context of the Roman Empire to establish whether the circumstances described within were not unique to Britannia but perhaps also applicable elsewhere. Thoroughly recommended.
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