HIGHLIGHTS
- What: This essay discusses the cultural assimilation and identity formation of free people in Gaul and the Egyptian Through comparative analyses the Article explores how freed people navigated new social roles and developed hybrid identities influenced by Celtic and Egyptian cultures. This means that identity formation and the development of ‘Gaulian` freedmen culture were founded on cultural exchanges between the Romans and the Celts, with the primary goal of optimising socioeconomic status and standing, thereby resulting in mixed Roman-Celtic cultural identities.
- Who: Roman provinces et al. from the Department of Classics, King`s College . . .

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