توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Ancient Rome: A New History
نام کتاب : Ancient Rome: A New History
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : روم باستان: یک تاریخ جدید
سری :
نویسندگان : David Potter
ناشر : Thames & Hudson
سال نشر :
تعداد صفحات : 369
ISBN (شابک) : 2013910652 , 9780500294123
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 171 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover (Ancient Rome-A New History_Third Edition)\nFront Matter\n Title Page\n Copyright\n Contents\n Preface\n New for This Edition\n Instructor and Student Resources\n Notes to the Reader\n Classical Sources\n Roman Names\n Family Trees\n Acknowledgments\n Introduction\n Methods and Sources\n Early Rome\n The Early Republic\n The Late Republic and Early Empire\n The Third and Fourth Centuries AD\n The End of Empire\n Sources in Other Languages\nChapter 1\n The Formation of the Roman Identity (800-350 BC)\n Timeline\n The First Roman Communities\n The Roman Story of Early Roman History\n Earliest Rome\n Early Political Structures\n The Domestic and Intellectual World of Early Rome\n Definitions\n Life Expectancy, Marriage, and Values\n Religion: Family and State\n Religion and Foreign Relations\n Rome in the Sixth Century BC\n The Servian Constitution\n Kings and Magistrates\n The Emergence ofthe Roman Republic\n Patricians and Plebeians\n The Twelve Tables\n The Licinian-Sextian Laws\n Roman Society in the Fourth Century\n Summary\nChapter 2\n War and Empire (350-133 BC)\n Timeline\n Rome and the Latins\n The Cassian Treaty\n The Relationship with the Latins after 337 BC\n The Doctrine of Decisive Victory\n The Wars of the Third Century BC\n The First Punic War\n The Second Punic War\n Why Did Rome Fight?\n The Militarism of the Third Century BC\n Technical Prowess\n The Empire: Patrons and Clients\n Provinces\n Patronage\n Taxes\n The Wars of the Second Century BC\n The Defeat of the Macedonian Kingdoms\n The \"New Wisdom\" of Empire\n The Empire in 133 BC\n The Consequences of Empire\n Culture\n Cato the Elder\n Italy and the Empire\n Slavery\n Summary\nChapter 3\n The Failure of the Roman Republic (133-59 BC)\n Timeline\n The Gracchi (133-121 BC)\n Tiberius Gracchus\n Gaius Gracchus\n The Defeat of Gaius Gracchus\n Popular Sovereignty and Senatorial Control (121-100 BC)\n The Suppression of Popular Sovereignty\n The End of Senatorial Dominance\n The Restoration of Popular Sovereignty\n The Age of Sulla (100-78 BC)\n The War with the Italians\n Livius Drusus and the Outbreak of the Social War\n The Social War and the Transformation of the Roman Republic\n Sulla: The Reactionary Revolutionary\n The Return of Sulla\n Life after Sulla (78-59 BC)\n The Professionalization of the Roman Army\n Changing the Legions\n Land Settlements for Veterans\n Spartacus, Pirates, and Mithridates\n Pompey\n cicero and Caesar\n Summary\nChapter 4\n The Transition from Republic to Principate (59 BC-AD 70)\n Timeline\n Explaining the Change\n The Domination of Caesar (59-44 BC)\n Culture in the Age of Caesar\n Catullus\n Caesar and Pompey\n The Road to the Rubicon\n The civil War and the Dictatorship of Caesar\n Octavianus and Antony (44-31 BC)\n Caesar\'s Heir (44-43 BC)\n The Era ofthe Triumvirs (43-31 BC)\n Actium\n The Fall of the Republic\n The House of Augustus (31 BC-AD 14)\n The Creation of a New Order\n The Consolidation ofthe Principate\n Augustus and Roman Culture\n The Succession (12 BC-AD 14)\n Changing the Structures of Government\n The Empire at the Death of Augustus\n Eccentric Stability: The Successors to Augustus (AD 14-69)\n Tiberius (r. AD 14-37)\n Caligula (r. AD 37-41)\n Claudius (r. AD 41-54)\n Nero (r. AD 54-68)\n The Year of the Four Emperors (AD 69)\n Summary\nChapter 5\n The Age of Stability (AD 70-238)\n Timeline\n New Dynasties (AD 70-180)\n The Flavians (AD 70-96)\n Nerva, Trajan, and Hadrian (AD 96-138)\n Hadrian (r. AD 117-138)\n The Antonines (r. AD 138-180)\n Imperial Culture\n The Contemporaries of Tacitus\n Statius, Lucan, and the New Style of Roman Epic\n Martial and Petronius\n Private Life\n Spectacle and Culture\n Religion and Culture\n Runningthe Roman Empire\n Emperors and Their Officials\n Emperors and Their Subjects\n Provincial Government\n Taxes and Trade\n The Roman Army\n An Age of Rust and Iron (AD 180-238)\n Commodus (r. AD 180- 192)\n Septimius Severus (AD 193- 211)\n Caracalla: Citizenship and Assassination (AD 211-17)\n Macrinus, Elagabalus, Alexander Severus, and the End of the Dynasty (AD 217-35)\n Maximinus and the civil War of AD 238\n Summary\nChapter 6\n The Transformation of the Roman World (AD 238-410)\n Timeline\n Third-Century Crises (AD 238-70)\n Bureaucrats and Emperors\n New Enemies?\n Barbarian Ascendancy (AD 238-70)\n The Restoration ofthe Empire (AD 270-305)\n Aurelian and His Successors (AD 270-84)\n Diocletian (r. AD 284-305)\n New Emperors\n Internal Reform\n Constantine and His Empire (AD 306-37)\n The Rise to Power (AD 306-12)\n The Conversion of Constantine (AD 312)\n Licinius (AD 313-24)\n Constantine and the Empire (AD 324-37)\n The Struggle for Control (AD 337-410)\n Constantius II and Julian (AD 337-63)\n Magnentius and Gallus\n Julian the Apostate\n Bureaucratic Backlash and Barbarian Invasion (AD 363-395)\n Emperors and Their Courts: A New Balance of Power\n Goths and Huns\n Stilicho and Alaric (AD 395-410)\n Summary\nChapter 7\n The Endings of the Roman Empire (AD 410-642)\n Timeline\n Barbarians and Emperors from Alaric to Geiseric (AD 410-77)\n Eastern Emperors and Western Kings from Theodosius II to Justinian (AD 408-527)\n Race and Religion\n The Vision of Justinian (AD 527-65)\n New Law Codes\n War and Rebellion\n The World of Heraclius and Umar (AD 565-642)\n The Great Persian War\n Islam\n Economic and Social Changes\n Western Europe\n North Africa and Italy\n Central Europe\n The Eastern Provinces\n Explaining Decline\n Summary\nGlossary\nRecommended Reading\nSources of Illustrations\nIndex