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영국의 로마 유적지 발굴보존과 역사교육의 활용사례Roman Britain and History Education on the case of Hadrian Wall and Aquae Sulis

Other Titles
Roman Britain and History Education on the case of Hadrian Wall and Aquae Sulis
Authors
차영길
Issue Date
2010
Publisher
한국서양고대역사문화학회
Keywords
1. 로만 브리튼(Roman Britain)2. 하드리아누스 성벽(Hadrian Wall)3. 로만 바스(Roman Bath)4. 브랜드 만들기(Brand Making)5. 역사적 사고력(historical reasoning)
Citation
서양고대사연구, no.27, pp 379 - 398
Pages
20
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
서양고대사연구
Number
27
Start Page
379
End Page
398
URI
https://scholarworks.gnu.ac.kr/handle/sw.gnu/25423
DOI
10.20975/jcskor.2010..27.379
ISSN
1229-4837
Abstract
The Aim of this paper is two. One is to survey the archaeological studies of 'Roman Britain'. The Other is how it can be connected to improve the historical reasoning of British people for their Roman past. In this paper, for these two purposes Hadrian's Wall and Roman Bath was examined as a case study. Study of the Roman past of Britain was slow to emerge from the medieval traditions of British history. Throughout much of the sixteenth century a fierce and often acrimonious struggle continued between the beleaguered defenders of the medieval tradition and the lively proponents of Renaissance learning. Camden tried to reconstruct the province of Britannia within a Roman context. The collectors of the seventeenth century were obviously influencd by the activities of aristocratic figures in the Mediterranean world. The early decades of the eighteenth century saw the most significant advances in knowledge of Roman Britain, which were to place the study of the province upon a new and more secure footing. The northern frontiers of Roman Britain formed an early focus of interest for antiquarians. Hodgson appears to have been the first to consider the frontier works as a whole and to construct a frontier system. Bruce's major works provided a basis for further work on the frontier. Bath be the first Roman site to be commented on after the end of Roman rule. The rebuilding of central Bath from the mid-eighteenth century began to reveal the kind of bulidings and sculptures which educated the most fashionable place of resort in England. In this paper, I considered how processes such as excavaton, conservation and history education functioned for the study of Roman Britain. For this, two cases of Hadrian Wall and Roman Bath examined and compared.
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