Skip to main content

Home/ Ancient Rome: History and Culture/ Group items tagged imperialism

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Jerry Monaco

Roman Imperialism and Runic Literacy : The Westernization of Northern Europe (150-800 AD) - 0 views

  •  
    Roman Imperialism and Runic Literacy : The Westernization of Northern Europe (150-800 AD)
Jerry Monaco

Mistaken Identities: How to Identify a Roman Emperor - 0 views

  •  
    What did the Roman emperor look like? Among the thousands of surviving Roman imperial marble heads, how do we put a name to a face, or a face to a name? This lecture will take a critical look at this process: it will not only question some of our modern certainties about who is who, but it will ask what we can learn from our mistakes.
Jerry Monaco

Climate Change and the Fall of the Roman Empire - 0 views

  •  
    In "Climate Change and the Fall of the Roman Empire," McCormick explores what bio-molecular evidence and climate change data suggest about the impact of volcanic events on the collapse of the Roman Empire and the rise of Carolingian Europe. Drawing on ice core evidence and primary documentary research for the period 750 to 950 AD, McCormick examines the impact of volcanic events on the collapse of the Roman Empire and the rise of Carolingian Europe. Climate cooling caused by eight volcanic events, resulted in nine major winter anomalies that affected food production and human survival.
Jerry Monaco

Imperatores Victi Military Defeat and Aristocratic Competition in the Middle and Late R... - 0 views

  •  
    The government that led Rome's rise to world power in the middle and late Republic was founded on aristocratic competition. What drew men to the struggle was the prospect of personal honor and political authority.[1] Entry into the highest stratum of Roman society came with victory at the polls: for most of the history of the Republic those who won a curule magistracy could expect enrollment in the senate at the next census, but even before that date they enjoyed a senator's prerogatives. They perhaps also earned a place among the nobilitas and passed this distinction on to their sons.[2] Furthermore, winning public office was inseparably bound up with the moral imperatives of aristocratic status. Virtus,gloria,dignitas, and a constellation of associated ideals represented the highest aspirations of aristocratic endeavor, and although in the abstract the qualities these words defined were capable of various manifestations, only rarely and awkwardly in fact could they be revealed apart from service to the state. Hence the vital importance of winning public office and thereby gaining the chance to display them: the moral superiority that their possession implied, quite as much as membership in the senate or noble birth, enabled individuals to
1 - 6 of 6
Showing 20 items per page