>
The Early Roman Expansion into Italy: Elite Negotiation and Family Agendas

The Early Roman Expansion into Italy: Elite Negotiation and Family Agendas

  • £17.29
  • Save £8.70


Nicola Terrenato
Cambridge University Press, 8/6/2018
EAN 9781108436854, ISBN10: 1108436854

Paperback, 348 pages, 24.4 x 17 x 2 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

This book presents a radical new interpretation of Roman expansion in Italy during the fourth and third centuries BCE. Nicola Terrenato argues that the process was accomplished by means of a grand bargain that was negotiated between the landed elites of central and southern Italy, while military conquest played a much smaller role than is usually envisaged. Deploying archaeological, epigraphic, and historical evidence, he paints a picture of the family interactions that tied together both Roman and non-Roman aristocrats and that resulted in their pooling power and resources for the creation of a new political entity. The book is written in accessible language, without technical terms or quotations in Latin, and is heavily illustrated.

List of illustrations
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Views of Roman imperialism through time
2. The long-term context of Roman expansion
central Italian society and politics in the early first Millennium BCE
3. The global context of Roman expansion
the central Mediterranean between the late fifth and the early third centuries BCE
4. A heterogeneous conquest I
a cross section of polity biographies and types of conflicts
5. A heterogeneous conquest II
family biographies and agendas
6. The consequences of the expansion
7. Conclusions
Works cited
Index.