Page 59 - Berkshire Encyclopedia Of World History Vol Two
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                                                        Travel has no longer any charm for me. I have seen all the foreign
                                                          countries I want to except heaven & hell & I have only a vague
                                                           curiosity about one of those. • Mark Twain (1835–1910)



            inscribed upon it, acts as a substitute for his presence”  In the historiography (the writing of history) of west-
            (2001, 34).                                         ern Eurasia, the remnants of Roman military fortifications
              Borders in the ancient Near East were fixed by treaties  have long attracted the attention of scholars. European
            between two equal parties or victor and vanquished.  historians were intrigued by the possible function of
            Existing treaties mention features of the landscape, names  structures such as Hadrian’s Wall, which stretches virtu-
            of cities, and lists of settlements subject to each ruler. A  ally from sea to sea across Great Britain and once fea-
            major question was the distribution of revenues, or who  tured three layers of barriers: ditches, walls and
            would pay tribute to whom.Treaties also defined penal-  watchtowers, and military roads, forts, and mobile
            ties for raiding, promoted cooperation to return run-  patrols. One Roman source explains that the purpose of
            aways, and included terms of trade. Safe conducts—  the wall was “to separate the Romans and barbarians”
            documents guaranteeing the right to travel across a  (Jones 1996, 47). The sixth-century Byzantine historian
            ruler’s territory without bureaucratic hindrance from  Procopius could even imagine the wall as a dividing line,
            minor officials—originated in Near Eastern diplomacy to  beyond which human habitation was literally impossible
            facilitate the movement of representatives of a ruler  due to pestilential air. Although boundary maintenance
            across foreign territories.                         structures have been imagined as zones of extreme exclu-
              We should not view these ancient boundaries of con-  sion, the evidence points to a much more complex
            trol, however, as the exact equivalent of modern territo-  picture.
            rial borders. Rulers were mainly interested in controlling  Because Roman frontier forts and garrisons ringed the
            strategic points. Liverani states: “The territory controlled  diverse edges of the Mediterranean world, historians
            by the state resembles an ‘oasis’. . . there is no need for  have tried to make sense of the role of border fortifica-
            a boundary line, but rather for ‘gateways’ channels of  tions in diverse terrains. Military historian Edward
            controlled communication with other states (or other in-  Luttwak’s The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire, pub-
            habited areas) beyond the depopulated belt” (Liverani  lished in 1976, argued that a Roman unified system of
            2001, 52). Remote border posts acted as a filter to let  defense in depth was developed by the Flavian emperors
            desirable things pass on into heart of the state and to  (second century CE) and subsequent emperors and was
            keep out undesirable things.                        applied strategically to the empire’s vast frontiers. Histo-
                                                                rians have debated whether these barriers indicate an
            Imperial Boundary                                   aggressive or defensive posture, whether strategic think-
            Maintenance in Eurasia                              ing on an empire-wide level can in fact be documented,
            In global history the Eurasian steppe has been the scene  whether far-flung infrastructures were ad hoc (concerned
            of various attempts by sedentary societies to create artifi-  with a particular end or purpose) local measures or were
            cial barriers to impede the movement of more mobile  centrally planned, whether Roman ideology could ever
            societies.These barriers required large investments of re-  admit a limit to expansion, and whether Greek traditions
            sources, and in some ways they foreshadowed the func-  of building military barrier walls influenced Roman
            tional role of modern borders in managing and control-  actions. Discussions have centered even on the meaning
            ling movement.Various states have used physical barriers  of the word limes, which some historians have used to
            in attempts to control the mobility of both their subjects  describe the frontier defense “system,” but which others
            and foreign adversaries.As late as the seventeenth century,  think referred only to military road networks. Because the
            Russia used the Belgorod Line, an earthen and wooden  “barbarian” invasions played a role in the fall of the
            barrier created to prevent nomadic attacks, to also limit  Roman empire in the West, discussions of frontier forti-
            the outward movement of its subjects from serfdom to  fications have implications for broader questions of impe-
            freedom in areas of the steppe beyond state control.  rial decline/transformation. Textual evidence is limited,
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