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Academic literature on the topic 'Famille – Ibérique, Péninsule – Antiquités'
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Journal articles on the topic "Famille – Ibérique, Péninsule – Antiquités"
Des Boscs-Plateaux, Françoise. "Épigraphie des amphores de la Bétique et épigraphie lapidaire : . l’apport d’une approche croisée à l’histoire socio-économique des élites : les dossiers des Stertinii et des Ocratii de Volubilis." Revue des Études Anciennes 121, no. 2 (2019): 357–89. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/rea.2019.6920.
Full textMcCaa, Robert. "Marriageways in Mexico and Spain, 1500–1900." Continuity and Change 9, no. 1 (May 1994): 11–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s026841600000415x.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Famille – Ibérique, Péninsule – Antiquités"
Armani, Sabine. "Relations familiales, relations sociales en Hispanie sous le Haut-Empire : étude épigraphique." Rennes 2, 2002. http://www.theses.fr/2002REN20054.
Full text@Up to now, it is mainly the romanization of Hispania through the aspect of urbanization and municipalization that has held the attention of searchers as is shown by recent historiography. Family and social relations in the provinces as a whole and in the Iberian peninsula particularly have merely aroused a polite interest with historians, perhaps because it was thought that they pertained essentially to the private filed often considered as the conservatory of the pre-Roman usages. Yet, the joint rising of the studies devoted to the anthropology of kinship, on one side, and regional onomastics. Celtic especially, on the other side, suggests that the history of the family is a field of investigation very near, indeed, to customs, but still nearer to the political. From that point of view, Hispania, whose legal and urban frame is better and better known, gathers every suitable condition to carry on an original investigation about the connection of family and social relationship with romanization : how did Hispano-roman communities adapt themselsves to the introduction of civitas and its corollary, Latin law. ? After successively studying the fitting of the Roman terminology about kinship to those new territories, noting the interpretation of Roman onomastic formulae according to the status of the individuals and its seniority, and closely examining the various attitudes in front of the neww territorial definition, we shall conclude that the acculturation, at once slow and quick, was not uniform and less one-sided
Michel, Olivier. "Les formes de l'habitat groupé du bassin de l'Ebre, d'Auguste aux premières implantations wisigothiques." Paris 7, 2009. http://www.theses.fr/2009PA070016.
Full textThis work questions the morphology of urban and rural agglomerations located in the ebro valley, during a period of about six centuries (from auguste to the first settlments of the wisigoths). After a first part centred on the conceptual and historiographical aspects, the corpus of agglomerations is analyzed in a systematic way to measure functional, spatial, and chronological constants and variabilites. In the third part, we suggest elaborating a typology between the agglomerations, based on varied criteria. It appears that a large number of establishments escape the characterization, because they were hybrid and changeable, but also because of a limited documentation. The fourth part adopts an integrated point of view. Having estimated the interest (and the limits) of systematic land surveys for the identification of the rural agglomerations, we develop some regional examples allowing to synthetize, in bounded and relatively well informed spaces, all the questionings highter realized. This work leans on a documentary catalog composed of 180 agglomerated sites ( certain, possible, hypothetical and unknown agglomerations) and of 24 systematic prospections given in appendices
Hiriart, Eneko. "Pratiques économiques et monétaires entre l'Èbre et la Charente (Ve s. - Ier s. a.C.)." Thesis, Bordeaux 3, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014BOR30045.
Full textFrom the fifth to the first century b.C., the space between the Ebro and the Garonne, which joins the Mediterranean to the Atlantic, is located at the crossroads of various cultural areas : the Celtic Gaul, the Iberian Peninsula, the Aquitaine, the greek cities, as well as Rome. Due to the lack of literary sources and archaeological data, our knowledge of indigenous peoples remains limited. This gap can be filled by the study of archeological materials. Among them, the coinage can provide crucial data because it represents a strong evidence of relations between the different protohistoric communities. In addition to that, owing to its symbolic value, money becomes a genuine expression of protohistoric societies. It seemed necessary to study the coinage in a new light so as to stand out from traditional numismatic approaches often restricted to iconographic and typological considerations. Those interpretations generally lead to a discourse too far from human and historical realities. The coins represent an evidence of a social reality. This work proposes a transdisciplinary point of view (archaeological, economic, numismatics, statistical and anthropological) to learn more about the complexity and the variety of monetary practices. One of the main issues remains the emergence of coinage. In this perspective, it was essential to define rhythms, modes, and also agents involved in its circulation. From various origins, the insertion of money within trade involves a series of structural changes : we try to measure their social, economic and political impacts. On the other hand, an analysis of different coinages drove us to characterize together ethnic realities, trade flows, political and cultural changes, as well as influences coming from more or less distant areas. This approach has also led us to distinguish historical trends and singular cultural fields. More generally, this approach focuses on the role of money in these protohistoric societies : which role does it play, what is its weight? What is it used for and whom does it serve? These questions aim to understand the features of trade during the second Iron Age. For the first time, this work outlines a monetary and economic panorama from the first coining to the advent of the Roman system