Introduction: Settler Colonies Between Roman Colonial Utopia and Modern Colonial Practice

Publication date

2020

Authors

Pelgrom, Jeremia
Weststeijn, ArthurISNI 0000000357221122

Editors

Pelgrom, Jeremia
Weststeijn, Arthur

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Part of book
Open Access logo

License

taverne

Abstract

This chapter shows the relevance of Carlo Sigionio’s reconstruction of Roman colonial practices for the history and theory of settler colonialism. It discusses how Sigonio’s analysis of Roman colonization as a vehicle of social emancipation implicitly criticized Venetian colonial strategies in the Eastern Mediterranean, and sketches its impact on European visions of overseas colonialism in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, highlighting English and Dutch examples of settler colonialism between Batavia (Jakarta) and Savannah, Georgia. For Sigonio, the Roman colony could be characterized as a well-ordered agrarian landscape concerned with protecting the property claims and political rights of a clearly defined community of citizen–farmers. With his detailed study of Roman colonial law and practice, Sigonio showed that there was a historical foundation for settler colonialism to work effectively. His reconstruction of the Roman settler colony made it possible to conceive of a colonial utopia as a concrete colonial practice.

Keywords

Roman history, settler colonialism, Carlo Sigonio, history of Venice, classical scholarship, Dutch empire, British empire, Taverne

Citation

Pelgrom, J & Weststeijn, A V 2020, Introduction: Settler Colonies Between Roman Colonial Utopia and Modern Colonial Practice. in J Pelgrom & A Weststeijn (eds), The Renaissance of Roman Colonization : Carlo Sigonio and the Making of Legal Colonial Discourse. Oxford University Press, pp. 1-24. https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198850960.001.0001