Results 261 to 270 of about 406,277 (311)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
2022
The sources on Roman imperial administration in North Africa are heterogenous, making its reconstruction difficult. The literary sources provide an outline of the history of the North African provinces, and hundreds of preserved inscriptions provide names and the careers of not only different governors and their legates but also the permanent staff of ...
openaire +3 more sources
The sources on Roman imperial administration in North Africa are heterogenous, making its reconstruction difficult. The literary sources provide an outline of the history of the North African provinces, and hundreds of preserved inscriptions provide names and the careers of not only different governors and their legates but also the permanent staff of ...
openaire +3 more sources
Roman Government and Administration
2015This chapter outlines how critical inscriptions are for our understanding of the functioning of the administrative structures of Roman government. The author discusses the best methodology for using epigraphic texts to reconstruct Roman administration, showing how even short texts can provide critical pieces of evidence, especially during the imperial ...
openaire +3 more sources
Abstract This chapter provides an overview of the workings of Roman law and administration in order to establish the institutional framework in which legal interactions between marginalized religious groups and the Roman authorities took place.
openaire +3 more sources
openaire +3 more sources
Cities and Administration in Roman Egypt
Journal of Roman Studies, 1992These two inscriptions come from the precinct of the temple of Hathor at Denderah (Tentyra), capital of the Tentyrite nome, just north of Thebes in Upper Egypt. The impressive remains of the complex are mostly late Ptolemaic and Roman (re)constructions, but they look Pharaonic and suggest social and cultural continuity across the centuries.
Alan K. Bowman, Dominic Rathbone
openaire +1 more source
The Administrators of Roman Egypt
Journal of Roman Studies, 1975Before A.D. 70 the prefecture of Egypt was the greatest prize in an equestrian career—four praetorian prefects were promoted to it—and thereafter it ranked only just below the praetorian prefecture, to which no fewer than fourteen governors of Egypt were advanced between 70 and 235. In the other great provinces of the empire legati Augusti pro praetore
openaire +1 more source
The Administrators of Roman Egypt
1990Abstract Before AD 70 the prefecture of Egypt was the greatest prize in an ejuestrian career—three or four praetorian prefects were promoted to it —and thereafter it ranked only just below the praetorian prefecture to which no fewer than fourteen governors of Egypt were advanced between 70 and 235.
openaire +1 more source
Order and Chaos in Roman Administrative Terminology
2020This chapter examines one of the mechanisms used by the Roman administration in Egypt to organize data: ‘all-embracing’ categories, and the manner in which the imperial government divided and categorized the provincial population. The concentration is on taxes and registration.
openaire +1 more source
Financial administration of the Roman Egypt
2015Annotations, with bibliographical references, on several aspects of the financial administration in Roman Egypt (idios logos, basilike ge, demosia ge, etc.). Title on the cover page: 'Administration financière'
openaire +1 more source
The administration of the Roman mines
2018Journal of the Chester Archaeological Society, 4, 80 ...
openaire +1 more source

