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_aD51 _b.C25 1998 |
| 245 | 0 | 4 |
_aThe Cambridge ancient history / _cedited by Averil Cameron,Peter Garnsey. |
| 246 | 3 | 0 | _aAncient history |
| 264 | 1 |
_aCambridge [England] ; _aNew York : _bCambridge University Press, _c1998. |
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| 300 |
_avolume <13> (xvi, 889 pages) : _billustrations, maps ; _c24 cm. |
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_2rdacontent _atext _btxt |
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_2rdamedia _aunmediated _bn |
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_2rdacarrier _avolume _bnc |
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| 504 | _aIncludes bibliographical references (pages 768-845) and index. | ||
| 505 | 1 |
_gvolume 13. _tThe late empire, A.D. 337-425 / _redited by Averil Cameron, Peter Garnsey |
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_t-- Table Of Contents: _tList of maps _tList of text-figures _tPreface _tPART I CHRONOLOGICAL OVERVIEW _t1 The successors of Constantine _tDAVID HUNT, Senior Lecturer in Classics and Ancient History at the University of Durbam _tI The dynastic inheritance, 337-40 _tII Constans and the west, 340-50 _tIII Constantius and Persia, 337-50 _tIV Magnentius, Vetranio and the recovery of the west, 350-3 _tV Athanasius, Gallus and Julian, 353-6 _tVI Constantius in Rome, 357 _tVII Sirmium and the search for a creed, 357-9 _tVIII Constantius in Constantinople, 359-60 _tIX Sapor and Julian, 360-1 _t2 Julian _tDAVID HUNT _tI The early years _tII Caesar in Gaul _tIII Proclamation at Paris _tIV Constantinople _tV Antioch _tVI Persia _t3 From Jovian to Theodosius _tJOHN CURRAN, Lecturer in Classics at The Queen's University of Belfast _tI Jovian _tII Valentinian and Valens: accession _tIII Religion, magic and treason at Rome _tIV Valentinian and the north-west frontier _tV Valentinian and Britain _tVI Valentinian and Africa _tVII Valens and the revolt of Procopius _tVIII Valens and Persia _tIX Valens and the Goths _tX Theodosius: the Gothic war _tXI Theodosius and Christianity _tXII The usurpation of Maximus and the fall of Gratian _tXIII The fall of Valentinian II and the usurpation of Eugenius _t4 The dynasty of Theodosius _tR.C. BLOCKLEY, Professor of Classics, Carleton University, Ottawa _tI Introduction _tII The empire divided, 395-404 _tIII The German onslaught on the west, 400-8 _tIV Alaric in Italy, 408-10 _tV The early years of Theodosius II, 408-14 _tVI Barbarian settlements in the west, 411-18 _tVII The ascendancy of Pulcheria, 414-23 _tVIII The last years of Honorius and the usurpation of John, 419-25 _tPART II GOVERNMENT AND INSTITUTIONS _t5 Emperors, government and bureaucracy _tCHRISTOPHER KELLY, Lecturer in Classics in the University of Cambridge, and Fellow of Corpus Christi College _tI Introduction _tII The emperor in the later Roman world _tIII Bureaucracy _tIV Conclusions _t6 Senators and senates _tPETER HEATHER, Lecturer in Early Medieval History, University College London _tI Institutional change _tII Senatorial careers _tIII Senators and emperors _tIV Senators and local politics _tV Conclusion _t7 The army _tA.D. LEE, Lecturer in Classics and Ancient History at the University of Wales, Lampeter _tI Organization and deployment _tII Resources and manpower _tIII The army, politics and society _tIV Military effectiveness _t8 The church as a public institution _tDAVID HUNT _tI Introduction: bishops at court _tII Organization and hierarchy _tIII A Christian environment _tIV Wealth _tV The church as a career _tVI Bishops and the community _tVII Bishops and the law _tPART III THE EMPIRE: ECONOMY AND SOCIETY _t9 Rural life in the later Roman empire _tC.R. WHITTAKER, Fellow of Churchill College, University of Cambridge _tPETER GARNSEY _tI Rural production _tII Labour and property owners _tIII The organization of the countryside _t10 Trade, industry and the urban economy _tPETER GARNSEY _tC.R. WHITTAKER _tI Introduction _tII State intervention and its limits _tIII Expanding estates, declining cities _tIV The city economy _tV Conclusion _t11 Late Roman social relations _tARNALDO MARCONE, Professor of the Economic and Social History of the Ancient World, University of Parma _tI Introduction _tII The sources _tIII A society in transition _tIV The regional reality _tV The emperor _tVI The upper classes _tVII The lower classes _tVIII Other social distinctions _tIX From patronage to patrocinium _tX Social mobility _tXI Social marginalization _tXII Conclusion _t12 The cities _tBRYAN WARD-PERKINS, Fellow of Trinity College, Oxford _tI What is a civitas and what is a city? _tII The decline of the curiae and the `end of the classical city' _tIII The new structures of power and loyalty _tIV Military needs _tV The impact of Christianity _tVI The size and wealth of cities _tVII Conclusion _tPART IV FOREIGN RELATIONS AND THE BARBARIAN WORLD _tR.C. BLOCKLEY _tI War, diplomacy and the Roman state _tII Sources _tIII The defence of the empire to Constantine _tIV From Constantine's death to the treaty of 363 _tV The Pannonian emperors _tVI Theodosius I: the aftermath of Adrianople _tVII The reigns of Arcadius and Honorius _tVIII Theodosius II: the emergence of diplomacy _t14 The eastern frontier _tBENJAMIN ISAAC, Professor of Ancient History at Tel Aviv University _tI Rome and Persia _tII Arabs and desert peoples _tIII Regional and local unrest _tIV Military organization _tV Conclusion _t15 The Germanic peoples _tMALCOLM TODD, Principal of Trevelyan College and Professor of Archaeology at the University of Durham _tI Introduction _tII Gaul, the Germanys and Raetia _tIII The northern coastlands and Holland _tIV Britain _tV Scandinavia and the western Baltic _tVI The eastern territories and the Danube lands _t16 Goths and Huns, c. 320-425 _tPETER HEATHER _tI Sources _tII The Goths to c. 370 _tIII Goths and Huns beyond the Roman frontier, c. 370-425 _tIV Goths and Romans, c.376-425 _t17 The barbarian invasions and first settlements _tI.N. |
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_tWOOD, Professor of Early Medieval History at the University of Leeds _tPART V RELIGION _t18 Polytheist religion and philosophy _tGARTH FOWDEN, Centre for Greek and Roman Antiquity, National Research Foundation, Athens _tI Repression and compromise, 337-61 _tII Julian, philosopher and reformer of polytheism _tIII Jovian to Theodosius II: the attrition of polytheism _tIV Polytheist resistances _tV Polytheism and Christianity _t19 Orthodoxy and heresy from the death of Constantine to the eve of the first council of Ephesus _tHENRY CHADWICK, Professor Emeritus of the University of Cambridge _t20 Asceticism: pagan and Christian _tPETER BROWN, Professor of History, Princeton University _t21 Christianization and religious conflict _tPETER BROWN _tPART VI ART AND CULTURE _t22 Education and literary culture _tAVERIL CAMERON _tI Introduction _tII Christianity and traditional education _tIII Literary education as a path to advancement _tIV Neoplatonism _tV Legal and other studies _tVI History-writing and its context _tVII High literary culture _tVIII Epistolography and literary networks _tIX Christian writing _tX Biography, Christian and pagan _tXI Ascetic literature _tXII Theological works _tXIII Conclusion _t23a Syriac culture, 337-425 _tSEBASTIAN BROCK, Reader in Syriac Studies in the University of Oxford _tI Introduction _tII Literary genres _tIII The threefold inheritance _tIV Interaction between Syriac and Greek culture _tV Syriac into Greek and Greek into Syriac _t23b Coptic literature, 337-425 _tMARK SMITH, University Lecturer in Ancient Egyptian and Coptic, University of Oxford _tI Magical texts _tII The Bible and Apocrypha _tIII Patristic and homiletic works _tIV Monastic texts and martyrologies _tV The Nag Hammadi library and related tractates _tVI Manichean writings _t24 Art and architecture _tJAS ELSNER, Lecturer in the History of Art at the Courtauld Institute, University of London _tI Introduction _tII The modern critical context _tIII Art and architecture, 337-425 _tChronological table _tBIBLIOGRAPHY _tAbbreviations _tFrequently cited works _tPart I: Chronological overview (chapter 1-4) _tPart II: Government and institutions (chapter 5-8) _tPart III: The empire: economy and society (chapters 9-12) _tPart IV: Foreign relations and the barbarian world (chapter 13-17) _tPart V: Religion (chapter 18-21) _tPart VI: Art and culture (chapter 22-24) _tIndex |
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