The Roman Empire has been an object of fascination for the past two millennia, and the story of how a small city in central Italy came to dominate the whole of the Mediterranean basin, most of modern Europe and the lands of Asia Minor and the Middle East, has often been told. It has provided the model for European empires from Charlemagne to Queen Victoria and beyond, and is still the basis of comparison for investigators of modern imperialisms. By an exhaustive investigation of the changing meanings of certain key words and their use in the substantial remains of Roman writings and in the structures of Roman political life, this book seeks to discover what the Romans themselves thought about their imperial power in the centuries in which they conquered the known world and formed the empire of the first and second centuries AD.
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Preface; 1. Ideas of empire; 2. The beginnings: Hannibal to Sulla; 3. Cicero's empire: imperium populi Romani; 4. The Augustan empire: imperium romanum; 5. After Augustus; 6. Conclusion: Imperial presuppositions and patterns of empire; Appendix 1. Cicero analysis; Appendix 2. Livy; Appendix 3. Imperium and provincia in legal writers; Bibliography; Index.
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This book seeks to discover what the Romans themselves thought about their empire by examining the changing meaning of key terms.

Product details

ISBN
9780521815017
Published
2008-12-18
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Weight
500 gr
Height
234 mm
Width
160 mm
Thickness
15 mm
Age
U, 05
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Number of pages
232

Biographical note

John Richardson is Emeritus Professor of Classics, University of Edinburgh. He has written on Roman Spain: Hispaniae: Spain and the Development of Roman Imperialism 218-82 BC (1986); The Romans in Spain (1996) and Appian: Wars of the Romans in Iberia (2000), and has contributed articles on Roman imperialism and Roman provincial administration to the Oxford Classical Dictionary (3rd edition, 1996) and the Cambridge Ancient History Volume IX (2nd edition, 1994).