In Sicily, at the beginning of the First Punic War, Rome was able to rely on the sole support of Messana. Yet, only one year later, and without any decisive Roman victory, the cities of Eastern Sicily and Segesta, followed by the King of Syracuse Hieron II, joined forces with the Romans. Their alliance lasted for the whole of the conflict, making the war for Sicily into a war of Sicily. What prompted the Sicilian cities to support Rome? With the aid of modern international relations theories, this book answers the question. It reconstructs how Sicily contributed to the Roman war effort, in the making of quinqueremes, in the training of sailors, in the logistics of the fleet, in supplying siege machines, in controlling and defending the...
The expansion of the Roman city in Italy and later in the Mediterranean, trom the early 5th to the l...
The First Punic War (264 B.C. – 241 B.C.) was the first of three major conflicts between the republi...
The idea that one factor can win a war seems preposterous, yet Rome’s acquisition of the Spanish min...
Sulle orme di un case-study sull’espansione di Roma in Italia tra 326 e 264 a.C., in questo articolo...
This paper examines the evidence for military activity in the Republican provincia of Sicily from t...
Despite the importance of the Social War to events of Late Republican Rome much debate exists over t...
“Privileged” Sicilian Cities during the Republican Period In Cicero’s time, only eight Sicilian citi...
This thesis will use Sicily as a microcosm to illustrate the imperialism of mid-Republican Rome, in ...
The aim is to point out the salient stages that led to a momentous change of the whole history of Gr...
Between 295 and 167 BC, Rome’s position in the western Mediterranean changed hugely. This thesis ask...
Roman armies in the 4th century and earlier resembled other Italian armies of the day. By using what...
This chapter will consider processes of transformation in the interior of north-western Sicily durin...
In several published studies, the author has shown the important role played by Dionysism and the It...
How did the Romans build and maintain one of the most powerful and stable empires in the history of ...
L'expansion de la cité romaine en Italie puis en Méditerranée, du début du Ve à la fin du lue siècle...
The expansion of the Roman city in Italy and later in the Mediterranean, trom the early 5th to the l...
The First Punic War (264 B.C. – 241 B.C.) was the first of three major conflicts between the republi...
The idea that one factor can win a war seems preposterous, yet Rome’s acquisition of the Spanish min...
Sulle orme di un case-study sull’espansione di Roma in Italia tra 326 e 264 a.C., in questo articolo...
This paper examines the evidence for military activity in the Republican provincia of Sicily from t...
Despite the importance of the Social War to events of Late Republican Rome much debate exists over t...
“Privileged” Sicilian Cities during the Republican Period In Cicero’s time, only eight Sicilian citi...
This thesis will use Sicily as a microcosm to illustrate the imperialism of mid-Republican Rome, in ...
The aim is to point out the salient stages that led to a momentous change of the whole history of Gr...
Between 295 and 167 BC, Rome’s position in the western Mediterranean changed hugely. This thesis ask...
Roman armies in the 4th century and earlier resembled other Italian armies of the day. By using what...
This chapter will consider processes of transformation in the interior of north-western Sicily durin...
In several published studies, the author has shown the important role played by Dionysism and the It...
How did the Romans build and maintain one of the most powerful and stable empires in the history of ...
L'expansion de la cité romaine en Italie puis en Méditerranée, du début du Ve à la fin du lue siècle...
The expansion of the Roman city in Italy and later in the Mediterranean, trom the early 5th to the l...
The First Punic War (264 B.C. – 241 B.C.) was the first of three major conflicts between the republi...
The idea that one factor can win a war seems preposterous, yet Rome’s acquisition of the Spanish min...