If his goal was to produce an “original and readable book” that would be “important for all students and scholars of Roman history and of politics in general”, as the back-cover copy claims, then Henrik Mouritsen has succeeded. In this slim, 172-page entry in the Key Themes in Ancient History series from Cambridge University Press, Mouritsen not only engages with the giants in Roman political history but challenges them, and the status quo of scholarship on the Roman Republic, while lucidly offering a vibrant reading of populism, republicanism, and political legitimacy in the Roman world that will give any readers with an interest in the subject much to ponder
The book under review, Faces of Power: Imperial Portraiture on Roman Coins, is a slim catalogue desi...
Review of: Stein, Peter, Roman Law in European History. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999
This paper seeks to establish what, if anything, the Empire’s Italian territories meant for its late...
The book under review is the published version of a doctoral dissertation in Latin philology defende...
Book Review: A.OMISSI, Emperors and Usurpers in the Later Roman Empire: Civil War Panegyric, and the...
About the author Zachary Brown is a native of Toronto Ontario and a junior studying history at Stan...
Cassius Dio: Greek Intellectual and Roman Politician, a collection of essays on this historian, is t...
This publication is a review of Herfried Münkler’s book “Empire: The logic of domination over the wo...
Andreas Mehl, Roman Historiography. An Introduction to its Basic Aspects and Development, trans. Han...
This is a big book. Literally. Each of its almost 800 pages is 6.75” x 9.75” (rather than the somewh...
Review: M. HEBBLEWHITE, The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235-395, London- New ...
Rome’s seemingly unstoppable march towards empire during the mid-republican period was a world-alter...
This essay will focus on the primary reasons for Rome’s transition from a Republic to an Empire. Muc...
It's a review of the book: Cortés Copete, J. M., Muñiz Grijalbo, E. y Lozano Gómez, F. (Eds.) (2015)...
The Romans commanded the largest and most complex empire the world had ever seen, or would see until...
The book under review, Faces of Power: Imperial Portraiture on Roman Coins, is a slim catalogue desi...
Review of: Stein, Peter, Roman Law in European History. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999
This paper seeks to establish what, if anything, the Empire’s Italian territories meant for its late...
The book under review is the published version of a doctoral dissertation in Latin philology defende...
Book Review: A.OMISSI, Emperors and Usurpers in the Later Roman Empire: Civil War Panegyric, and the...
About the author Zachary Brown is a native of Toronto Ontario and a junior studying history at Stan...
Cassius Dio: Greek Intellectual and Roman Politician, a collection of essays on this historian, is t...
This publication is a review of Herfried Münkler’s book “Empire: The logic of domination over the wo...
Andreas Mehl, Roman Historiography. An Introduction to its Basic Aspects and Development, trans. Han...
This is a big book. Literally. Each of its almost 800 pages is 6.75” x 9.75” (rather than the somewh...
Review: M. HEBBLEWHITE, The Emperor and the Army in the Later Roman Empire, AD 235-395, London- New ...
Rome’s seemingly unstoppable march towards empire during the mid-republican period was a world-alter...
This essay will focus on the primary reasons for Rome’s transition from a Republic to an Empire. Muc...
It's a review of the book: Cortés Copete, J. M., Muñiz Grijalbo, E. y Lozano Gómez, F. (Eds.) (2015)...
The Romans commanded the largest and most complex empire the world had ever seen, or would see until...
The book under review, Faces of Power: Imperial Portraiture on Roman Coins, is a slim catalogue desi...
Review of: Stein, Peter, Roman Law in European History. New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999
This paper seeks to establish what, if anything, the Empire’s Italian territories meant for its late...