This publication is presented to you through Paradigm Publishing Services
Harvard University Press
Chapter
Licensed
Unlicensed
Requires Authentication
Notes
You are currently not able to access this content.
You are currently not able to access this content.
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface and acknowledgements vii
- List of figures and plates xvi
- Abbreviations xxi
-
Part I: Early Italy and the foundation of Rome
- 1. Introducing early Rome 1
- 2. Setting the scene: Iron-Age Italy 10
- 3. Trojans, Latins, Sabines and rogues: Romulus, Aeneas and the ‘foundation’ of Rome 35
- 4. The rise of the international aristocracy: Italy and the orientalising revolution 54
- 5. Orientalising Rome and the early kings 83
-
Part II: War, politics and society: Rome and Italy, 600–400
- 6. The urban revolution: city and state in sixth-century Italy 99
- 7. Tyrants and wicked women: Rome, the Tarquin dynasty and the fall of the monarchy 127
- 8. The ‘fifth-century crisis’ and the changing face of Italy 154
- 9. A difficult transition: the early Roman Republic 171
- 10. Rome on the march: war in Latium and beyond, 500–350 199
-
Part III: The Roman conquest of It
- 11. The road to power: Italy and Rome, 390–342 217
- 12. ‘Whether Samnite or Roman shall rule Italy’: the Samnite wars and the conquest of Italy 238
- 13. Co-operation or conquest? Alliances, citizenship and colonisation 262
-
Part IV: From city-state to Italian dominance
- 14. The impact of conquest: Rome, 340–264 291
- 15. Epilogue: Rome, Italy and the beginnings of empire in 26 322
- Appendix: Roman dates and chronology 329
- Timeline 331
- A note on sources 335
- Notes 347
- Further reading 367
- Guide to sites, museums and online resources 375
- Bibliography 381
- Index 393
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Preface and acknowledgements vii
- List of figures and plates xvi
- Abbreviations xxi
-
Part I: Early Italy and the foundation of Rome
- 1. Introducing early Rome 1
- 2. Setting the scene: Iron-Age Italy 10
- 3. Trojans, Latins, Sabines and rogues: Romulus, Aeneas and the ‘foundation’ of Rome 35
- 4. The rise of the international aristocracy: Italy and the orientalising revolution 54
- 5. Orientalising Rome and the early kings 83
-
Part II: War, politics and society: Rome and Italy, 600–400
- 6. The urban revolution: city and state in sixth-century Italy 99
- 7. Tyrants and wicked women: Rome, the Tarquin dynasty and the fall of the monarchy 127
- 8. The ‘fifth-century crisis’ and the changing face of Italy 154
- 9. A difficult transition: the early Roman Republic 171
- 10. Rome on the march: war in Latium and beyond, 500–350 199
-
Part III: The Roman conquest of It
- 11. The road to power: Italy and Rome, 390–342 217
- 12. ‘Whether Samnite or Roman shall rule Italy’: the Samnite wars and the conquest of Italy 238
- 13. Co-operation or conquest? Alliances, citizenship and colonisation 262
-
Part IV: From city-state to Italian dominance
- 14. The impact of conquest: Rome, 340–264 291
- 15. Epilogue: Rome, Italy and the beginnings of empire in 26 322
- Appendix: Roman dates and chronology 329
- Timeline 331
- A note on sources 335
- Notes 347
- Further reading 367
- Guide to sites, museums and online resources 375
- Bibliography 381
- Index 393