Kennedy, Scott2021-03-312021-03-3120190009-8388http://hdl.handle.net/11693/76036The Ostrogothic king Theoderic I (a.d. 475–526) drew on his experience of ruling post-imperial Italy when he famously remarked that ‘The poor Roman imitates the Goth and the rich Goth imitates the Roman’. Written well after the fall of the western Roman empire, these words have prefaced many discussions of the process of Roman and barbarian assimilation and mutual acculturation. This topic has long captured the imagination of scholars, who have approached the topic from many different angles, such as archaeology, religion, prosopography and literature.EnglishWinter is coming: the barbarization of Roman leaders in imperial panegyrics from 446-468 A.DArticle10.1017/S00098388190003511471-6844