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Barbarians and Romans, A.D. 418-584
A01=Walter Goffart
Alans
American Council of Learned Societies
Attempt
Author_Walter Goffart
Barbarian
Barbarian kingdoms
Benefice
Beneficiary
Burgundians
Capitulare de villis
Cassiodorus
Category=NHDJ
Claudian
Desertion
Diocletian
Early Middle Ages
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Euric
Expropriation
Fall of the Western Roman Empire
Fisc
Gepids
Gregory of Tours
Gundobad
Hospitality
Imperial Government
Italians
Jordanes
Kingdom of the Lombards
Land grant
Late Antiquity
Lecture
Lombards
Marc Bloch
Merovingian dynasty
Mommsen
Monograph
Mrs.
Munera (ancient Rome)
N. (novella)
Odoacer
Orosius
Ostrogothic Kingdom
Ostrogoths
Ownership
Paul the Deacon
Payment
Precedent
Pretext
Roman army
Roman Government
Roman Law
Roman province
Romulus Augustulus
Salary
Seminar
Slavery
Source document
Superiority (short story)
Tax
Tax exemption
Tax law
Taxpayer
The Goths
The Other Hand
Theodoric
Usufruct
Valentinian III
Vandals
Victor Vitensis
Visigothic Code
Visigothic Kingdom
Visigoths
Product details
- ISBN 9780691102313
- Weight: 369g
- Dimensions: 140 x 216mm
- Publication Date: 21 Oct 1987
- Publisher: Princeton University Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
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Despite intermittent turbulence and destruction, much of the Roman West came under barbarian control in an orderly fashion. Goths, Burgundians, and other aliens were accommodated within the provinces without disrupting the settled population or overturning the patterns of landownership. Walter Goffart examines these arrangements and shows that they were based on the procedures of Roman taxation, rather than on those of military billeting (the so-called hospitalitas system), as has long been thought. Resident proprietors could be left in undisturbed possession of their lands because the proceeds of taxation,rather than land itself, were awarded to the barbarian troops and their leaders.
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