Roman Imperialism in the Late RepublicCornell University Press, 1968 - 117 Seiten |
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Seite 4
... barbarian fringe of the Empire , on the other hand , war never stopped . In Spain , Liguria or Sardinia no settled frontier ever existed . For decades slow con- quest , interrupted by many setbacks , gradually expanded the occupied and ...
... barbarian fringe of the Empire , on the other hand , war never stopped . In Spain , Liguria or Sardinia no settled frontier ever existed . For decades slow con- quest , interrupted by many setbacks , gradually expanded the occupied and ...
Seite 10
... barbarian ' frontier ' : there no one ( except perhaps a man's inimici , for their private profit ) greatly cared ... barbarians were far too humane to punish him ; whereupon he returned to ΙΟ.
... barbarian ' frontier ' : there no one ( except perhaps a man's inimici , for their private profit ) greatly cared ... barbarians were far too humane to punish him ; whereupon he returned to ΙΟ.
Seite 13
... barbarian frontier . There it would not commit the State ( at least at any one time ) to more than it could ... barbarians became a recognised pursuit - a matter of political life or death to many a Roman noble . Even in the first ...
... barbarian frontier . There it would not commit the State ( at least at any one time ) to more than it could ... barbarians became a recognised pursuit - a matter of political life or death to many a Roman noble . Even in the first ...
Inhalt
THE ECONOMIC MOTIVE | 16 |
THE SENATE AGAINST EXPANSION | 29 |
NEW INTERESTS AND NEW ATTITUDES | 44 |
Urheberrecht | |
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
accepted action actual administration already annexation appear Asia attempt became become benefit Caesar certainly CHAPTER Cicero cities citizens claim clear clearly clients collection command concerned connection consideration consul course Cyrene developed discussion doubt early East economic effect empire Equites especially evidence extent fact force foreign friends further Gaul give given governed governor Gracchus Greek honour idea imperialism important increasing interests Italian Italy king land later least look major Marius matter mention merely MICHIGAN Mithridates motives Naturally never NOTES obvious perhaps political Pompey probably profits province reason references Republic Roman Rome second century seems seen Senate settlement Social sources success surely taken talents territory tion traditional wars whole
Verweise auf dieses Buch
Space, Geography, and Politics in the Early Roman Empire, Band 19 Claude Nicolet Eingeschränkte Leseprobe - 1991 |