Orientals in Late Antique Italy: Some Observations
Orientals in Late Antique Italy: Some Observations
Author(s): Giusto TrainaSubject(s): History of Law, Ancient World, Migration Studies, Roman law
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Jagiellońskiego
Keywords: Late Antiquity; Late Roman Italy; Roman Law; Immigration Studies;
Summary/Abstract: Some evidence points at the presence of Orientals in late Roman Italy: traders (labeled “Syrians”), petty sellers (the pantapolae in Nov. Val. 5), but also students, professors such as Ammianus Marcellinus, or pilgrims. Although being Roman citizens, nonetheless they were considered foreign individuals, subject to special restrictions. The actual strangers made a different case, especially the Persians. The situation of foreign individuals was quite different. Chauvinistic attitudes are widely attested, and they worsened in critical periods, for example after Adrianople. This may explain the laws of early 397 and June 399, promulgated during Stilicho’s regency, which prohibited the wearing of trousers (bracae) and some fashionable boots called tzangae. Of course, some protégés of the imperial court had the right to enter Italy, as it was the case of the Sassanian prince Hormisdas, who accompanied Constantius II in his visit of Rome in 357.
Journal: Electrum. Studia z historii starożytnej
- Issue Year: 2022
- Issue No: 29
- Page Range: 249-259
- Page Count: 11
- Language: English