Glocalisation and Roman Religion in the Danubian provinces
Roman religion is often researched in Central-Eastern Europe within local, often provincial limits or individual case studies. Spatial self limitation is often a pragmatic choice of religious studies, however this often limits researchers in focusing also on the global aspects of Roman objectspace and human mobilities and interconnectivities. This paper will focus on the idea of religious glocalism, as a methodological tool, which offers an alternative methodological approach to the often-debated globalism in Roman Empire and the narrow-focused localism and the artificial limits of "Roman provincial religion". The paper will examine particular case studies from the Danubian provinces, as one of the most dynamic macro-regions of the Roman Empire.