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Rural religion, religious places and local identities in Hispania: the sanctuary at Can Modolell (Cabrera de Mar, Barcelona)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 November 2017

Alejandro G. Sinner
Affiliation:
Greek and Roman Studies, University of Victoria, B.C., [email protected]
Víctor Revilla Calvo
Affiliation:
Universitat de Barcelona, Víctor Revilla Calvo

Extract

Rural cults are an aspect of the religion and culture of Roman Hispania that it is especially difficult to analyze given the paucity of epigraphic and archaeological evidence. This is quite a recent area of research; in addition, we are dealing with often modest religious practices that are difficult to identify in the archaeological record. Particularly problematic is the lack of information regarding cult places, despite the contribution made by some pioneering studies; yet the main problem has been the dominance of a paradigm that defines rural religion as a marginal space for social life, one that followed its own evolutionary rhythm influenced by a resistance to change. According to this paradigm, rural cults seem to comprise an unsystematic accumulation of traditional ritual practices whose preferred sphere of action would have been private.

Type
Archaeological Notes
Copyright
Copyright © Journal of Roman Archaeology L.L.C. 2017 

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