A Companion to the Roman Empire
Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World

November 2009
724 Pages, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
A Companion to the Roman Empire provides readers with a
guide both to Roman imperial history and to the field of Roman
studies, taking account of the most recent discoveries.
* This Companion brings together thirty original essays guiding
readers through Roman imperial history and the field of Roman
studies
* Shows that Roman imperial history is a compelling and vibrant
subject
* Includes significant new contributions to various areas of Roman
imperial history
* Covers the social, intellectual, economic and cultural history
of the Roman Empire
* Contains an extensive bibliography
List of Tables xiii
Notes on Contributors xiv
Acknowledgments xvi
Reference works: Abbreviations xvii
Ancient authors: Abbreviations and Glossary xx
The Emperors of Rome from Augustus to Constantine xxix
Introduction: The Shape of Roman History: The Fate of the Governing Class 1
David S. Potter
PART I THE SOURCES 21
1 Constructing a Narrative 23
Cynthia Damon
2 Roman Imperial Numismatics 35
William E. Metcalf
3 Documents 45
Traianos Gagos and David S. Potter
4 Art, Architecture, and Archaeology in the Roman Empire 75
Lea Stirling
5 Interdisciplinary Approaches 98
James B. Rives
PART II NARRATIVE 113
6 The Emergence of Monarchy: 44 BCE-96 CE 115
Greg Rowe
7 Rome the Superpower: 96-235 CE 126
Michael Peachin
8 The Transformation of the Empire: 235-337 CE 153
David S. Potter
PART III ADMINISTRATION 175
9 The Administration of the Provinces 177
Clifford Ando
10 The Transformation of Government under Diocletian and Constantine 193
Hugh Elton
11 The Roman Army 206
Nigel Pollard
12 Greek Cities Under Roman Rule 228
Maud W. Gleason
13 Cities and Urban Life in the Western Provinces of the Roman Empire 30 BCE-250 CE 250
Jonathan Edmondson
PART IV SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC LIFE 281
14 The Imperial Economy 283
David Mattingly
15 Landlords and Tenants 298
Dennis P. Kehoe
16 The Family 312
Judith Evans Grubbs
17 Sexuality in the Roman Empire 327
Amy Richlin
18 On Food and the Body 354
Veronika E. Grimm
19 Leisure 369
Garrett G. Fagan
20 Spectacle 385
David S. Potter
PART V INTELLECTUAL LIFE 409
21 The Construction of the Past in the Roman Empire 411
Rowland Smith
22 Imperial Poetry 439
K. Sara Myers
23 Greek Fiction 453
Joseph L. Rife
24 Roman Law and Roman History 477
John Matthews
25 Roman Medicine 492
Ann Hanson
26 Philosophy in the Roman Empire 524
Sara Ahbel-Rappe
PART VI RELIGION 541
27 Traditional Cult 543
David Frankfurter
28 Jews and Judaism 70-429 CE 565
Yaron Z. Eliav
29 Christians in the Roman Empire in the First Three Centuries CE 587
Paula Fredriksen
30 Christian Thought 607
Mark Edwards
Bibliography 620
Index 681
Companions, it is of comparable length, but with just 30
contributors and 30 chapters ... it gives each other more depth
and breadth." (Ancient East and West, 2008)
"For those with reservations about the 'companion' phenomenon,
[this volume] is an excellent advertisement for the benefits of
such an exercise.... This volume is almost uniformly good as a
guide to central topics in Roman history from the first to the
forth century, with a number of outstanding discussions," (The
Classical Review, 2008)
"A very impressive collection indeed, summarising and building
on the latest scholarship, especially the view that there is more
to history than politics and the powerful." (Journal of Classics
Teaching)
"Scholar, student, and interested layperson will all find much
to ponder here, and the editor, publisher, and contributors are to
be commended for the success of their undertaking. This
Companion, at least, constitutes a welcome addition to the
field, offers a clear statement of the current state of the
discipline, and provides inspiration for future directions" (New
England Classical Journal)
"This Companion to the Roman Empire provides a
fascinating and scholarly insight into our ancient past. It is an
ideal reference tool for students and scholars alike, presenting
new methods and modes of study that should provoke thought among
the readership. It also brings together many disciplines of study
that allow scholars to study an Empire as vast and influential as
that created by the Romans." (Reference Reviews)
"The thirty chapters in this latest title in Blackwell's
excellent "Companions to the Ancient World" series are written by
such experts in their fields as Maud Gleason, Judith Evans Grubbs,
Amy Richlin and Ann Hanson ... No comparable handbook exists ...
Essential. All levels/libraries." (Choice--A
Choice Outstanding Academic Title for 2007)
"This elegantly and carefully edited book is a resounding
success." (Scholia Reviews)
"David Potter has assembled an impressive array of scholars
whose essays in this volume provide overviews and summarize the
current state of scholarship on a variety of topics. A Companion
to the Roman Empire succeeds in meeting the needs of its
diverse audience and also offers a few surprises." (Bryn Mawr
Classical Review)
"With a panoramic lens, more diverse and inclusive than any
forerunner, this indispensable Companion probes the Roman empire
for the 21st century. A tour de force certain to challenge and
excite everyone engaged by Roman civilization."
-Richard Talbert, University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill
"An immensely rich and varied menu. This volume will not only be
an invaluable vade mecum for scholars, students and all who have an
interest in Roman imperial civilisation and its impact on the
Mediterranean world and northern Europe, but will also reveal the
wealth of evidence for Roman culture and the new and exciting ways
in which historians can 'read' it."
-Alan Bowman, Oxford University
"David Potter has assembled a powerful team and together they
have produced a rich collection - a major new synthesis of much of
the most recent research in the discipline. No student or teacher
could fail to learn from it."
-Greg Woolf, University of St. Andrews
University of Michigan. He has published extensively on the history
of the Roman world and appeared on many television programmes
concerned with the history of Rome. His most recent publications
include Life, Death and Entertainment in the Roman Empire
(co-edited with David J. Mattingly, 1999), Literary Texts and
the Roman Historian (1999) and The Roman Empire at Bay, AD
180-39 (2004)