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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Leiden : BRILL
    UID:
    gbv_775671975
    Format: Online-Ressource (362 p)
    ISBN: 9789004214668
    Series Statement: Mnemosyne, Supplements, History and Archaeology of Classical Antiquity v.365
    Content: The Roman Empire of the Principate may be understood as a consortium of communities bound together by ties that were institutional and personal. Civic patrons played a central role in that process by which subjects became citizens
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Contents; Foreword; List of Tables and Graphs; Some Representative Texts; Chapter One. Introduction; 1.1. Varieties of Patronage; 1.2. On the Theory and Practice of Patronage in Modern Scholarship; 1.3. On the Nature of Exchange; 1.4. Concerning Evidence and Methods; 1.5. Redefining Civic Patronage and {Patrocinium Publicum}; 1.6. On Cause and Effect / Mutual Reinforcement; 1.7. Central Issues and Questions; 1.8. On the Organization of This Monograph; Chapter Two. Civic Patronage in the Late Republic; 2.1. Patrocinium and Clientela in CaesarÕs Bellum Gallicum , 2.2. Caesar, Pompeius and the Patronage of Massilia2.3. The Spanish/ {Clientelae} of Pompeius and Caesar; 2.3.1. The Clientele of Pompeius; 2.3.2. The Clientele of Caesar; 2.3.3. CaesarÕs First Settlement of Spain; 2.3.4. Caesar and the Spanish Communities after Ilerda; 2.4. Italian/ {Clientelae} in the Late Republic; 2.4.1. Quinctius C. f. Valgus and Aeclanum; 2.4.2. Sulla and Pompeii; 2.4.3. Cicero and His Clients in Capua and Reate; 2.4.4. The Clientele of Pompeius in Picenum; 2.4.5. Patrons and Client Communities After CaesarÕs Death; 2.5. Patronage of the Greek Cities of the East , 2.6. ConclusionChapter Three. Augustus and Civic Patronage; 3.1. The Theory and Practice of Civic Patronage in the Age of Augustus; 3.2. The/ {Princeps} and the Imperial Family; 3.3. {Aemulatio principis}: Civic Patronage and the Urban Policy of Augustus; 3.4. Patronage and Urban Policy; 3.5. Patronage in the Principate of Augustus: The Question of Status; 3.6. The Fate of the Civic/ {Clientelae} of the Republican Nobility; 3.7. Mutual Obligations; Chapter Four. Civic Patronage in the Principate; 4.1. Civic Patronage in the Literary Evidence of the Principate , 4.2. Pliny and His Client Communities4.2.1. Pliny and Tifernum; 4.2.2. Pliny and the Baetici; 4.2.3. Pliny and Firmum; 4.2.4. Pliny and Comum; 4.2.5. Patronage and Benefaction in PlinyÕs Letters; 4.3. Fronto and Cirta; 4.4. Epictetus and the Patron of Cnossos; 4.5. Tacitus on the Limits of Civic Patronage; 4.6. Conclusion; Chapter Five. Civic Patronage in the Verrines; 5.0. Introduction; 5.1. The Working of Patronage in the/ {Verrines}; 5.1.1. {Patronus causae}; 5.1.2. The Patrons of the Sicilian Communities; 5.1.3. The Patrons of the Province; 5.1.4. The Patrons of Communities , 5.1.5. The Patrons of Individuals5.1.6. Conclusions; 5.2. The Working of/ {Hospitium}; 5.2.1. The/ {Hospites}; 5.2.2. Equality and Inequality; 5.2.3. {Hospitium} and/ {Proxenia}; 5.2.4. {Publice} and/ {Privatim}; 5.2.5. The Initiation of the Relationship; 5.2.6. The Duties of the/ {Hospites}; 5.2.7. The Violation of/ {Hospitium}; 5.2.8. The Renunciation of/ {Hospitium}; 5.3. Cicero and the Sicilians; 5.4. The Representation of/ {Patrocinium} and/ {Hospitium}; 5.4.1. Statues and Inscriptions ({monumenta}); 5.4.2. {Laudationes} and/ {Legationes}; 5.5. Conclusions , Chapter Six. Civic Patronage in Roman Law
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789004261716
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9789004214668
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Civic Patronage in the Roman Empire
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books
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