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Roman imperialism and local identities
REVELL, L. Roman imperialism and local identities. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2009. 236 pp.
Alex da Silva Martire
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Attitudes to Roman Imperialism
It is argued that Romano-British studies have been influenced by the existence and organisation of Britain’s own empire. A positive conception of Roman imperialism is still current and this indicates that many Romanists have yet to escape from moral ...
Melania Cazzulo
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Referring to the work by Louise Revell, a lecturer in Roman History at the University of Southampton, the author examines the peculiarities of interpretation of Roman imperialism, and issues of cultural and political identity in the 1st–2nd Century AD ...
Maxim Valerievich Shisterov
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New Threats, Old Challenges: Understanding Roman Imperialism in Post-Soviet Russia
Russian scholars who want to study the Roman Empire, its provinces, and theoretical aspects of Roman imperialism face issues such as the notable disfavour for theoretical re-thinking and debate (a striking contrast to Western academia).
Anton Yeralyevich Baryshinkov
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COMPETITION, MEANING, AND MONUMENTALIZATION IN GALLIA COMATA
Perhaps the most striking, and archaeologically speaking the most evident, change that occurred in Gallia Comata from the 1st century BCE to the end of the 2nd century CE was the incorporation of massive, monumental, Roman-style architecture.
AARON W. IRVIN
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Pax Romana and the Roman “imperialism” in the 1st century A.D
This article is devoted to such a historical phenomenon as the Roman imperialism in the epoch of Augustus and his coming successors. Despite the fact that the founder of the Principate had declared the coming of pax Augusta, he spent several wars of ...
Vladimir O. Nikishin
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Spaced-Out Sanctuaries: the Ritual Landscape of Roman Greece
Effects of the Roman conquest of Greece have been little studied, in favour of emphasising the ‘reverse imperialism’ of Greece’s cultural conquest of Rome.
Melania Cazzulo
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A reflection by Montesquieu on the relationship between absolutism, idleness and politeness (“EL” XIX, 27) is connected, through a note later deleted in the manuscript, to chap.
Sergio Audano
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Bridging Faiths and Empires: The Assumptionists and the Mission d’Orient (1863–1923)
This paper examines the Assumptionists’ mission, known as the Mission d’Orient, initiated in 1862 with the aim of uniting the Roman Catholic and Orthodox Churches against the backdrop of a changing political and religious landscape.
Ediz Hazir
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Dea Dardanica: Pre-Roman tribal deity or Roman imperial construct?
The text problematizes the interpretation of Dea Dardanica, a religious phenomenon from the period of the Roman Empire, conceived from the traditional perspective as a kind of ethno-tribal deity of Dardania and the Dardanians.
Vladimir D. Mihajlović
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