Diplomats and diplomacy in the Roman world /
The Roman world was fundamentally a face-to-face culture, where it was expected that communication and negotiations would be done in person. This can be seen in Rome's contacts with other cities, states, and kingdoms - whether dependent, independent, friendly or hostile - and in the development...
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Format: eBook
Language: English
Published:
Boston :
Brill,
2009.
Series:
Mnemosyne, Supplements
304.
Mnemosyne Supplements Online, Volumes 204-407, ISBN: 9789004322288.
Subjects:
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Call Number: DG214.5 .D56 2009
- Preliminary Material /
- Claude Eilers
- Introduction /
- Claude Eilers
- Roman Perspectives On Greek Diplomacy /
- Sheila L. Ager
- Public Opinion, Foreign Policy And Just War In The Late Republic /
- Alexander Yakobson
- Rome, Kinship And Diplomacy /
- Filippo Battistoni
- Diplomacy And Identity Among Jews And Christians /
- James B. Rives
- After The Embassy To Rome: Publication And Implementation /
- Jean-Louis Ferrary
- Diplomacy In Italy In The Second Century Bc /
- Martin Jehne
- Embassies Gone Wrong: Roman Diplomacy In The Constantinian Excerpta De Legationibus /
- T. Corey Brennan
- Diplomacy As Part Of The Administrative Process In The Roman Empire /
- Werner Eck
- Not Official, But Permanent: Roman Presence In Allied States The Examples Of Chersonesus Taurica, The Bosporan Kingdom And Sumatar Harabesi /
- Rudolf Haensch
- Maps /
- Claude Eilers
- Bibliography /
- Claude Eilers
- Index /
- Claude Eilers
- Supplements To Mnemosyne Edited By G.J. Boter, A. Chaniotis, K.M. Coleman, I.J.F. De Jong And P. H. Schrijvers /
- Claude Eilers.