Maps | |
Figures | |
Preface | |
Acknowledgments | |
Notes to the Reader | |
Early Italy | |
Italy and the Mediterranean World | |
The Evidence | |
Italy Before the City | |
The Iron Age in Etruria, Latium, and Campania | |
Greeks and Phoenicians in the Central Mediterranean | |
The Rise of Cities | |
Beginning of Writing | |
Appearance of an Elite | |
Cities and Monumental Architecture | |
Warfare in the Orientalizing and Archaic Periods | |
Social and Economic Organization | |
Greeks and Etruscans | |
Greek Cities of Southern Italy and Sicily | |
Etruscans | |
Rome's First Centuries | |
Emergence of an Urban Community | |
The Romans and Their Early History | |
Table 2.1 Dates of Rome's Kings According to Varro | |
Box 2.1 Plutarch, Romulus 11 | |
Rome Under the Kings | |
Rome and the Latins | |
The Early Republic | |
Beginning of the Republic | |
Rome and Its Neighbors in the Fifth Century | |
Struggle of the Orders | |
Rome and Italy in the Fourth Century | |
Fall of Veii and the Sack of Rome | |
The City and Its Institutions in the Fourth Century | |
Officials | |
Senate | |
Assemblies of Citizens | |
Box 3.1 Servius Tullius' Creation of the Census (Livy) | |
Table 3.1 Roman Assemblies | |
The City, Its Gods, and Its Priests | |
Box 3.2 The Roman Games (Dionysius of Halicarnassus) | |
Rome and Central Italy | |
Warfare and the Civic Order | |
Rome in Latium and Campania | |
Samnite Wars | |
Expansion of Roman Hegemony in Italy | |
Wars in Central and Northern Italy | |
Conquest of the South | |
War and the Roman State | |
The Beginnings of a Mediterranean Empire | |
Sources | |
The Nobility and the City of Rome | |
Box 4.1 Triumph of Scipio Africanus (Appian) | |
Wars with Carthage | |
First Punic War (264-241) | |
Second Punic War (218-201) | |
Box 4.2 Romans' Vow of 217 (Livy) | |
A Mediterranean Empire | |
Governors, Provinces, and Empire | |
Spain | |
Greece and Asia Minor | |
Box 4.3 Slave Trade on Delos (Strabo) | |
North Africa | |
Italy and Empire | |
Senators, Officials, and Citizen Assemblies | |
Italy and the Consequences of Empire | |
Changing Relations Between Rome, Its Municipia, and Allies | |
Roman and Italian Elites | |
Box 5.1 Scipio Africanus' Army Loots Carthago Nova (Polybiusand Livy) | |
Demographic and Economic Changes | |
Roman Politics from the Mid-Second Century | |
Scipio Aemilianus | |
Tiberius Gracchus | |
Box 5.2 The Background to Tiberius Gracchus' Land Proposal (Appian) | |
Gaius Gracchus | |
Italy Threatened, Enfranchised, Divided | |
War with Jugurtha (112-105) | |
Italy Threatened from the North (113-101) | |
Changes in the Roman Army | |
Marius' Career in Roman Politics | |
Box 6.1 Marius' Bid for the Consulship (Sallust) | |
Sixth Consulship of Marius and Second Tribunate of Saturninus (100) | |
Administration of the Provinces | |
Tribunate of Livius Drusus (91) | |
Social War (91-87) | |
Tribunate of Sulpicius Rufus (88) | |
Sulla's First March on Rome (88) | |
Cinna's Rule (87-84) | |
Sulla's Second March on Rome (83-82) | |
The Domination of Sulla and Its Legacy | |
Sulla's Proscriptions (82-81) | |
Sulla the Dictator and His Program (82-81) | |
Senate | |
Tribunate | |
Equites, Courts | |
Citizens | |
Governors | |
Verdicts on Sulla's Program | |
Box 7.1 Cicero's Defense of Sextus Roscius | |
Lepidus' Rising and Its Aftermath (78-77) | |
Challenge from Sertorius in Spain (80-73) | |
Box 7.2 Pompey's Letter from Spain (Sallust) | |
Spartacus' Slave Revolt (73-71) | |
Consulship of Crassus and Pompey (70) | |
Roman Women | |
Pompey Frees the Mediterranean of Pirates (67) | |
Threat from King Mithridates VI of Pontus | |
Sulla's Campaign Against Mithridates (87-85) | |
Lucullus' Struggle with Mithridates (74-67) | |
Pompey's Defeat of Mithridates (66-63) | |
Roles of Crassus and Cicero in Rome (65-63) | |
Catiline's Rising (63-62) | |
End of the Republic: Caesar's Dictatorship | |
Sources | |
Pompey's Return from the East (62) | |
Pompey and Political Stalemate in Rome | |
Partnership of Pompey, Crassus, and Caesar | |
Caesar's First Consulship (59) | |
Clodius' Tribunate (58) | |
Cicero's Recall and the Renewal of the Triumvirate (57-56) | |
Caesar's Campaigns in Gaul (58-51) | |
Death of Clodius and Pompey's Sole Consulship (52) | |
Prospect of Civil War (51-49) | |
Causes and Consequences of Caesar Crossing the Rubicon (January 49) | |
Cicero's Governorship of Cilicia (51-50) | |
Civil War Campaigns (49-45) | |
Caesar's Activity as Dictator (49-44) | |
Caesar's Impact upon the City of Rome | |
Political Prospects for Rome, and for Caesar | |
Augustus and the Transformation of the Roman World | |
Reactions to the Assassination of Caesar (44-43) | |
Emergence of a Second Triumvirate (43) | |
Battle of Philippi (42) | |
Box 9.1 Laudatio Turiae | |
Perusine War (41-40) | |
Elimination of Sextus Pompey and Lepidus (39-36) | |
Antony in the East (42 onwards) | |
Clash Between Antony and Octavian (36-30) | |
Octavian as Sole Ruler (30 Onwards) | |
""The Republic Restored"" | |
Second Settlement (23) | |
Latin Literature in the Late Republic and Augustan Age | |
Succession | |
Table 9.1 The Julio-Claudian Family | |
Senate and Equites | |
Army | |
The Empire and Its Expansion | |
Box 9.2 Oath of Loyalty | |
City of Rome | |
Attitudes Outside Rome | |
Res Gestae of Augustus | |
Augustus: Final Assessment | |
The Early Principate (A.D. 14-69): The Julio-Claudians, the Civil War of 68-69, and Life in the Early Empire | |
Sources | |
The Julio-Claudian Emperors: Civil Government and Military Concerns | |
Tiberius (14-37) | |
Box 10.1 Senatorial Decree Concerning the Elder Gnaeus Piso | |
Gaius (Caligula) 37-41 | |
Claudius (41-54) | |
Box 10.2 Claudius' Speech on the Admission of Gauls to the Senate | |
Nero (54-68) | |
Civil War in 68-69 | |
Economic and Social Change | |
Army | |
Economy | |
Intellectual Life | |
""Beneficial Ideology"" | |
Cities and Provinces | |
Diversity: Women, Local Languages, and Culture | |
Religious Practices and Principles | |
Imperial Cult | |
Institutionalization of the Principate: Military Expansion and Its Limits, the Empire and the Provinces (69-138) | |
Sources | |
Institutionalization of the Principate | |
Vespasian (69-79) | |
Titus (79-81) | |
Domitian (81-96) | |
A New, Better Era? | |
Nerva (96-98) | |
Trajan (98-117) | |
Hadrian (117-138) | |
Table 11.1 The Antonine Family | |
Box 11.1 Hadrian Inspects Troops at Lambaesis, Numidia | |
Roman Cities and the Empire's Peoples | |
Theaters and Processions | |
Circuses and Chariot Racing | |
The Amphitheater, and Gladiatorial Games | |
Other Urban Amenities | |
Education | |
State Religion and Imperial Cult | |
Italy and the Provinces: Civil and Military Affairs (138-235) | |
Sources | |
Antoninus Pius (138-161) | |
Marcus Aurelius (161-180) and Lucius Verus (161-169) | |
Box 12.1 A Greek Provincial Praises Roman Citizenship | |
Box 12.2 Morbidity and Mortality in the Roman Empire | |
Commodus (176-192, Sole Augustus after 180) | |
Septimius Severus (193-211) | |
Table 12.1 The Severan Family | |
Box 12.3 Deification Ceremonies for Pertinax in Septimius Severus' Rome | |
Caracalla (198-217, Sole Augustus after 211) | |
Macrinus (217-218) | |
Elagabalus (218-222) | |
Severus Alexander (222-235) | |
Roman Law | |
Roman Citizenship | |
Box 12.4 Grant of Roman Citizenship (Tabula Banasitana) | |
Rome and Christianity | |
Box 12.5 Pliny, Trajan, and Christians | |
The Third Century, the Dominate, and Constantine | |
Sources | |
Mid-Third Century | |
Aurelian (270-275) | |
Dicoletian, the Tetrarchy, and the Dominate (284-305) | |
Box 13.1 The Tetrarchs Introduce their Edict on Maximum Prices | |
Dissolution of the Tetrarchy (305-313), and the Rise of Constantine (306-324) | |
Box 13.2 Galerius' Edict of Toleration (Lactantius) | |
Constantine and the Empire | |
Timeline | |
Glossary | |
Principal Ancient Authors | |
Art Credits | |
Index | |
Gazetteer | |
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