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Imperial Power, Provincial Government, and the Emergence of Roman Asia, 133 BCE-14 CE

by: Jordan, B.

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Category: New Books
Code: 29566
ISBN-13: 9780198887065 / 978-0-19-888706-5
ISBN-10: 019888706X / 0-19-888706-X
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication Date: 2023
Publication Place: Oxford
Binding: Cloth
Pages: 276
Book Condition: New
Comments: Oxford Classical Monographs

 Imperial Power, Provincial Government, and the Emergence of Roman Asia, 133 BCE-14 CE
Bradley Jordan
Oxford Classical Monographs
Explores in detail how Roman administrative practices developed in a late Republican provincial context
Demonstrates the critical role of local communities and agents in constructing Roman hegemony within the province of Asia
Emphasizes the limited administrative ambitions of the Roman state and shows how decisions regarding provincial government were never divorced from personal and internal Roman politics

Description
What ambitions lay behind Roman provincial governance? How did these change over time and in response to local conditions? To what extent did local agents facilitate and contribute to the creation of imperial administrative institutions? The answers to these questions shape our understanding of how the Roman empire established and maintained hegemony within its provinces. This issue of imperial hegemony is particularly acute for the period during which the political apparatus of the Roman Republic was itself in crisis and flux—precisely the period during which many provinces first came under Roman control.

Imperial Power, Provincial Government, and the Emergence of Roman Asia, 133 BCE-14 CE uses a case study of the province of Asia to focus closely on the formation and evolution of the Roman empire's administrative institutions. Comparatively well-excavated, Asia's rich epigraphy lends itself to this detailed study, while the region's long history of autonomous civic diplomacy and engagement with a range of Roman actors provide vital evidence for assessing the ways in which Roman empire and hegemony affected conditions on the ground in the province. Asia's unique history, moving from allied kingdom to regularly assigned provincia to a reconquered and reorganized territory, offers an insight into the complex workings of institutional formation.

From an investigation of the institutions which emerged in the province over a long first century (133 BCE-14 CE), Bradley Jordan considers the discursive power of official utterances of the Roman state, and the strategies employed by local actors to negotiate a favourable relationship with the empire.

Table of Contents
Abbreviations
Introduction
I: The Institutions of Roman Government
1:From the Attalids to Proconsular Administration, 133-88 BCE
2:The Government of Asia during the Late Republic, 81-49 BCE
3:Change in a Time of Civil War, 49-30 BCE
4:Provincia Asia and the Advent of the Principate, 30 BCE-14 CE
II: Roman Hegemony, Power, and Local Agency
5:Hegemony and the Discourse(s) of Power in Roman Asia
6:The 'Politics of Honour': Learning a New Set of Rules
7:Speaking to Roman Power: Diplomacy and Civic Privilege
8:Local Displays of Imperial Documents
Conclusions
Reference List
Index

 
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Imperial Power, Provincial Government, and the Emergence of Roman Asia, 133 BCE-14 CE

by: Jordan, B.

  • ISBN-13: 9780198887065 / 978-0-19-888706-5
  • ISBN-03: 019888706X / 0-19-888706-X
  • Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2023

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