This volume gathers twelve studies on key aspects of the history of Rome and its empire between the end of the Hannibalic War (200 BCE) and the election of Tiberius Gracchus to the tribunate (134 BCE). Through this periodization, which places the focus on what intervened between two major and well-studied historical turning points in Republican history, the book aims to bring new light to the interplay between imperial expansion, political volatility, and intellectual developments, and on the various levels on which historical change unfolded.
The lack of a continuous ancient narrative for this period, even late or derivative, has shaped much of the historiographical discourse about it. This volume seeks to convey a new sense of the depth of the period and establishes new connections among aspects of human agency and action that are usually considered in isolation from one another. It puts in fruitful dialogue contribution on a range of topics as diverse as climate change, oratory, agrarian laws, urban architecture, and the civilian military, among others. The result is a diverse, multifocal, non-hierarchical assessment of a critical but often understudied period in Roman history.
With a well-balanced list of established and up-and-coming scholars, A Community in Transition fills a substantial historiographical gap in the study of the Roman Republic.
Author(s): Mattia Balbo, Federico Santangelo
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2022
Language: English
Pages: 390
City: New York
Cover
Half Title
A Community in Transition
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
List of Contributors
1. Introduction: Whence and Whither?
2. Climate Change and Rome’s Changing Republic
3. The Agrarian Policy of the Senate between Hannibal and the Gracchi
4. The Political Culture of Coinage: The Introduction and Development of the Denarius System
5. Public Buildings and Urban Landscape: A View from the Riverfront
6. Goodbye to All That: The Roman Citizen Militia after the Great Wars
7. The Administration of the Imperium Romanum in the Second Century bce
8. Legislation, Politics, and Social Change in the Early Second Century bce
9. Interactions between Tribunes and Senate
10. The Gentes Maiores and Aristocratic Competition in Rome (200–134 bce)
11. The Arrival of Eloquence? The Changing Parameters of Public Speech in the Second Century
12. Beyond Conservatism: Charting Roman Religion between Hannibal and Scipio Nasica
13. Epilogue—Periodization in Perspective: Further Thoughts about the Second Century bce
Index Locorum
General Index