Moving Romans provides a coherent framework for the study of Roman migration on the basis of a detailed study of migration to the city of Rome in the first two centuries A.D. It shows how migration influenced other aspects of Roman society, including social relations, the family, work, and cultural interaction.
LE Tacoma offers the reader a penetrating reflection on migration in Rome, based on a solid historiographic foundation and a careful and careful examination of books or articles, although devoted to more recent periods and very often written in the language but which allow us to glimpse the richness of the subject. In addition, the coherent and rigorous methodology for studying this problem within the framework of Vrbs during the Principat, thanks to a
thorough knowledge of the ancient sources, but also of the contributions of the isotopic analyzes, also contributes to making the work henceforth impossible to circumvent for any future publication on this subject. For all these reasons, one can recommend reading, profitable and stimulating, to all those who wish
to take interest in this topic for other regions of the Roman world.