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Releasing the Miraculous - Walking in all Nine Gifts of the Holy Spirit (Hardcover): James Tan Releasing the Miraculous - Walking in all Nine Gifts of the Holy Spirit (Hardcover)
James Tan; Foreword by Lynne Hammond, Pat Harrison
R835 Discovery Miles 8 350 Ships in 9 - 15 working days
The World Is So Big - An Artist's Sketchbook (Hardcover): James Tan The World Is So Big - An Artist's Sketchbook (Hardcover)
James Tan
R899 R761 Discovery Miles 7 610 Save R138 (15%) Ships in 10 - 15 working days
Power and Public Finance at Rome, 264-49 BCE (Hardcover): James Tan Power and Public Finance at Rome, 264-49 BCE (Hardcover)
James Tan
R3,789 Discovery Miles 37 890 Ships in 10 - 15 working days

Rome's wars delivered great wealth to the conquerors, but how did this affect politics and society on the home front? In Power and Public Finance at Rome, James Tan offers the first examination of the Roman Republic from the perspective of fiscal sociology and makes the case that no understanding of Roman history is complete without an appreciation of the role of economics in defining political interactions. Examining how imperial profits were distributed, Tan explores how imperial riches turned Roman public life on its head. Rome's lofty aristocrats had traditionally been constrained by their dependence on taxpayer money. They relied on the state to fund wars, and the state in turn relied on citizens' taxes to fuel the war machine. This fiscal chain bound the elite to taxpayer consent, but as the spoils of Empire flooded into Rome, leaders found that they could fund any policy they chose without relying on the support of the citizens who funded them. The influx of wealth meant that taxation at home was ended and citizens promptly lost what bargaining power they had enjoyed as a result of the state's reliance on their fiscal contributions. With their dependence on the taxpayers loosened, Rome's aristocratic leaders were free to craft a fiscal system which prioritized the enrichment of their own private estates and which devoted precious few resources to the provision of public goods. In six chapters on the nature of Rome's imperialist enrichment, on politics during the Punic Wars and on the all-important tribunates of the Gracchi, Tan offers new conceptions of Roman state creation, fiscal history, civic participation, aristocratic pre-eminence, and the eventual transition to autocracy.

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