Taking “eschatology” as engagement with the prospect of the breakdown of social and political order, this contribution discusses the various ways in which the question of the duration or fall of the Roman empire influenced the works of different Hellenistic authors. Bringing Polybius, Dionysius and Aemilius Sura, representatives of elite forms of historical writing in the Roman West, into dialogue with more “popular” texts such as the Third Sibylline Oracle and the miracle narrative in Phlegon of Tralleis, both associated with the Eastern Mediterranean, this chapter explores the interrelationship of eschatology and the debate about the end (or not) of Roman power in the late Hellenistic period. Honing in on the complexity of the debate abou...
International audienceReflections on empires among ancient writers can take different directions. So...
The era of Septimius Severus and his successors (AD 193-235) began with civil war and saw the breakd...
With a prompt that has been written about countless times, this essay argues that the fall of the Ro...
During his sixteen-year detention in Rome, Polybius’s initial admiration for the Romans faded as he ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
This thesis will contend that Polybius' stress on Achaean unity was related to his need to contrast ...
The essays in this volume address central problems in the development of Roman imperialism in the th...
Greek historians of the Roman Empire, from Polybius through Appian, admired the breadth and stabilit...
This is the first full-length study of the final war between Rome and the ancient Macedonian monarch...
The Roman’s victory over the Seleucids at Apamea in 188 B.C. offers them the chance to become the mo...
This thesis will contend that Polybius' stress on Achaean unity was related to his need to contrast...
This thesis builds upon recent scholarship that has analyzed Polybius' Histories as a literary work ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Ancient History Bulletin...
Beginning with a reassessment of passages from Polybius and other 2nd-century BCE sources, this stud...
Various approaches to Paul’s relationship with the Roman Empire have come to the fore, including tho...
International audienceReflections on empires among ancient writers can take different directions. So...
The era of Septimius Severus and his successors (AD 193-235) began with civil war and saw the breakd...
With a prompt that has been written about countless times, this essay argues that the fall of the Ro...
During his sixteen-year detention in Rome, Polybius’s initial admiration for the Romans faded as he ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Oxford University Press ...
This thesis will contend that Polybius' stress on Achaean unity was related to his need to contrast ...
The essays in this volume address central problems in the development of Roman imperialism in the th...
Greek historians of the Roman Empire, from Polybius through Appian, admired the breadth and stabilit...
This is the first full-length study of the final war between Rome and the ancient Macedonian monarch...
The Roman’s victory over the Seleucids at Apamea in 188 B.C. offers them the chance to become the mo...
This thesis will contend that Polybius' stress on Achaean unity was related to his need to contrast...
This thesis builds upon recent scholarship that has analyzed Polybius' Histories as a literary work ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Ancient History Bulletin...
Beginning with a reassessment of passages from Polybius and other 2nd-century BCE sources, this stud...
Various approaches to Paul’s relationship with the Roman Empire have come to the fore, including tho...
International audienceReflections on empires among ancient writers can take different directions. So...
The era of Septimius Severus and his successors (AD 193-235) began with civil war and saw the breakd...
With a prompt that has been written about countless times, this essay argues that the fall of the Ro...