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Imperial and Local Citizenship in the Long Second Century CE offers
a radical new history of Roman citizenship in the long century
before Caracalla's universal grant of citizenship in 212 CE.
Earlier work portrayed the privileges of citizen status in this
period as eroded by its wide diffusion. Building on recent
scholarship that has revised downward estimates for the spread of
citizenship, this work investigates the continuing significance of
Roman citizenship in the domains of law, economics and culture.
From the writing of wills to the swearing of oaths and crafting of
marriage, Roman citizens conducted affairs using forms and language
that were often distinct from the populations among which they
resided. Attending closely to patterns at the level of province,
region and city, this volume offers a new portrait of the early
Roman empire: a world that sustained an exclusive regime of
citizenship in a context of remarkable political and cultural
integration.
The empires of the ancient Near East and Mediterranean invented
cosmopolitan politics. In the first millennia BCE and CE, a
succession of territorially extensive states incorporated
populations of unprecedented cultural diversity. Cosmopolitanism
and Empire traces the development of cultural techniques through
which empires managed difference in order to establish effective,
enduring regimes of domination. It focuses on the relations of
imperial elites with culturally distinct local elites, offering a
comparative perspective on the varying depth and modalities of
elite integration in five empires of the ancient Near East and
Mediterranean. If cosmopolitanism has normally been studied apart
from the imperial context, the essays gathered here show that
theories and practices that enabled ruling elites to transcend
cultural particularities were indispensable for the establishment
and maintenance of trans-regional and trans-cultural political
orders. As the first cosmopolitans, imperial elites regarded ruling
over culturally disparate populations as their vocation, and their
capacity to establish normative frameworks across cultural
boundaries played a vital role in the consolidation of their power.
Together with an introductory chapter which offers a theory and
history of the relationship between empire and cosmopolitanism, the
volume includes case studies of Assyrian, Seleukid, Ptolemaic,
Roman, and Iranian empires that analyze encounters between ruling
classes and their subordinates in the domains of language and
literature, religion, and the social imaginary. The contributions
combine to illustrate the dilemmas of difference that imperial
elites confronted as well as their strategies for resolving the
cultural contradictions that their regimes precipitated.
This study in the language of Roman imperialism provides a
provocative new perspective on the Roman imperial project. It
highlights the prominence of the language of mastery and slavery in
Roman descriptions of the conquest and subjection of the provinces.
More broadly, it explores how Roman writers turn to paradigmatic
modes of dependency familiar from everyday life - not just slavery
but also clientage and childhood - in order to describe their
authority over, and responsibilities to, the subject population of
the provinces. It traces the relative importance of these different
models for the imperial project across almost three centuries of
Latin literature, from the middle of the first century BCE to the
beginning of the third century CE.
Historians constantly wrestle with uncertainty, never more so than
when attempting quantification, yet the field has given little
attention to the nature of uncertainty and strategies for managing
it. This volume proposes a powerful new approach to uncertainty in
ancient history, drawing on techniques widely used in the social
and natural sciences. It shows how probability-based techniques
used to manage uncertainty about the future or the present can be
applied to uncertainty about the past. A substantial introduction
explains the use of probability to represent uncertainty. The
chapters that follow showcase how the technique can offer leverage
on a wide range of problems in ancient history, from the incidence
of expropriation in the Classical Greek world to the money supply
of the Roman empire.
This study in the language of Roman imperialism provides a
provocative new perspective on the Roman imperial project. It
highlights the prominence of the language of mastery and slavery in
Roman descriptions of the conquest and subjection of the provinces.
More broadly, it explores how Roman writers turn to paradigmatic
modes of dependency familiar from everyday life - not just slavery
but also clientage and childhood - in order to describe their
authority over, and responsibilities to, the subject population of
the provinces. It traces the relative importance of these different
models for the imperial project across almost three centuries of
Latin literature, from the middle of the first century BCE to the
beginning of the third century CE.
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