Volume 32 of Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World
Editor: David S. Potter
Edition: illustrated, reprint
Publisher: John Wiley & Sons, 2009
ISBN: 1405199180, 9781405199186
Length: 724 pages
Subjects: History › Ancient History › General
About this book
- A Companion to the Roman Empire furnishes perusers with a guide both to Roman royal history and to the field of Roman investigations, assessing the latest disclosures.
- This Companion unites thirty unique articles managing perusers through Roman majestic history and the field of Roman examinations
- Demonstrates that Roman royal history is a convincing and lively subject
- Incorporates critical new commitments to different territories of Roman majestic history
- Spreads the social, scholarly, monetary and social history of the Roman Empire
- Contains a broad reference index
New disclosures always make us reconsider what we think
about Roman history. A Companion to the Roman Empire keeps understudies and
expert students of history in the know regarding these improvements, yet
additionally exhibits to a more extensive crowd why the Roman Empire remains a
convincing and energetic subject. It furnishes perusers with a guide both to
Roman supreme history and to the field of Roman investigations.
New disclosures continually make us reexamine what we think
about Roman history. A Companion to the Roman Empire keeps understudies and
expert students of history in the know regarding these advancements, yet
additionally exhibits to a more extensive group of spectators why the Roman
Empire remains a convincing and dynamic subject. It furnishes perusers with a
guide both to Roman supreme history and to the field of Roman examinations.
The individual supporters of this volume all make huge new
commitments to the zones about which they are composing. Points run from
scholarly and social issues, to authoritative, financial, and social history,
and every section gives perusers a study of the subject. The volume likewise
incorporates a dialog of sources and techniques for considering Roman majestic
history.
David Potter is Professor of Greek and Latin at the
University of Michigan. He has distributed broadly on the historical backdrop
of the Roman world and showed up on numerous TV projects worried about the
historical backdrop of Rome. His latest productions incorporate Life, Death and
Entertainment in the Roman Empire (co-altered with David J. Mattingly, 1999),
Literary Texts and the Roman Historian (1999) and The Roman Empire at Bay, AD
180-395(2004).
No comments:
Post a Comment