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The economic importance and mobility of horses in the Roman Netherlands

The economic importance and mobility of horses in the Roman Netherlands
The economic importance and mobility of horses in the Roman Netherlands
Previous research has suggested that horse breeding, with the army as the intended buyer, was an important part of the local agrarian economy in the Roman Dutch eastern river area. Since it is very difficult to trace the origins of horses by traditional archaeozoological methods, strontium isotope analysis was used to investigate the origins of horses in both military and rural sites. These new data are integrated with data on horse frequencies and size to assess the economic importance of horses in rural communities in the eastern river area and further investigate possible supply networks. Both horse frequencies and horse size increase from the Early Roman period onwards, reflecting the significant economic importance of horses in this region. The laser ablation 87Sr/86Sr ratios show evidence for mobility in military horses but not in rural horses.
1047-7594
535-556
Groot, Maaike
28828734-77c6-47b9-9659-7c0d1a6f9b96
Gerling, Claudia
030d4e84-d101-4936-a24e-2e539ecd96a4
Pike, Alistair W.G.
e8603e20-0a89-4d57-a294-247b983fc857
Groot, Maaike
28828734-77c6-47b9-9659-7c0d1a6f9b96
Gerling, Claudia
030d4e84-d101-4936-a24e-2e539ecd96a4
Pike, Alistair W.G.
e8603e20-0a89-4d57-a294-247b983fc857

Groot, Maaike, Gerling, Claudia and Pike, Alistair W.G. (2024) The economic importance and mobility of horses in the Roman Netherlands. Journal of Roman Archaeology, 37 (2), 535-556. (doi:10.1017/S1047759424000230).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Previous research has suggested that horse breeding, with the army as the intended buyer, was an important part of the local agrarian economy in the Roman Dutch eastern river area. Since it is very difficult to trace the origins of horses by traditional archaeozoological methods, strontium isotope analysis was used to investigate the origins of horses in both military and rural sites. These new data are integrated with data on horse frequencies and size to assess the economic importance of horses in rural communities in the eastern river area and further investigate possible supply networks. Both horse frequencies and horse size increase from the Early Roman period onwards, reflecting the significant economic importance of horses in this region. The laser ablation 87Sr/86Sr ratios show evidence for mobility in military horses but not in rural horses.

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Published date: 1 December 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 499678
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/499678
ISSN: 1047-7594
PURE UUID: 346fc0a5-8b17-4fe8-a648-326f806d7724
ORCID for Alistair W.G. Pike: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-5610-8948

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Date deposited: 31 Mar 2025 16:42
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:07

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Contributors

Author: Maaike Groot
Author: Claudia Gerling

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