Politics and Society in Imperial RomeISBN: 978-1-4051-7969-0
Hardcover
176 pages
July 2009, Wiley-Blackwell
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“This
is, in a nutshell, the argument of Aloys Winterling in this
stimulating collection of essays. Winterling's work is well known
to German readers and this volume will hopefully bring the
attention of a non?]German
audience to it. The articles collected in this volume span the last
ten years, and although written on different occasions they show
remarkable coherence. The thesis presented above is constantly
restated from different points of view. Repetition is inevitable,
but this is a minor fault: the author's arguments and methodology
are new and sophisticated, and deserve to be well
understood.” (Bryn
Mawr Classical Review,
May 2010)
"This valuable book offers a fresh examination of the structure of Roman imperial government. By concentrating on the dual aspect of the imperial regime—the one part descending from the institutions of the Republic, the other emerging from the household of the emperors—Winterling frames his issue with admirable clarity."
–David Potter, University of Michigan
"This valuable book offers a fresh examination of the structure of Roman imperial government. By concentrating on the dual aspect of the imperial regime—the one part descending from the institutions of the Republic, the other emerging from the household of the emperors—Winterling frames his issue with admirable clarity."
–David Potter, University of Michigan