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El. knyga: Romans at War: Soldiers, Citizens, and Society in the Roman Republic

Edited by (University of Auckland, New Zealand), Edited by (McGill University, Canada)
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This volume addresses the fundamental importance of the army, warfare, and military service to the development of both the Roman Republic and wider Italic society in the second half of the first millennium BCE.

It brings together emerging and established scholars in the area of Roman military studies to engage with subjects such as the relationship between warfare and economic and demographic regimes; the interplay of war, aristocratic politics, and state formation; and the complex role the military played in the integration of Italy. The book demonstrates the centrality of war to Rome’s internal and external relationships during the Republic, as well as to the Romans’ sense of identity and history. It also illustrates the changing scholarly view of warfare as a social and cultural construct in antiquity, and how much work remains to be done in what is often thought of as a ‘traditional’ area of research.

Romans at War will be of interest to students and scholars of the Roman army and ancient warfare, and of Roman society more broadly.

List of maps
ix
List of tables
xi
List of contributors
xiii
Preface and acknowledgments xvii
Note on texts, translations, and abbreviation xix
Maps
xxi
1 Writing about Romans at war
1(16)
Jeremy Armstrong
Michael P. Fronda
2 The institutionalization of warfare in early Rome
17(18)
Fred K. Drogula
3 The price of expansion: agriculture, debt-dependency, and warfare during the rise of the Republic, c. 450--287
35(17)
Peter Vanderpuy
4 The dilectus-tributum system and the settlement of fourth century Italy
52(24)
James Tan
5 Organized chaos: manipuli, socii, and the Roman army c. 300
76(23)
Jeremy Armstrong
6 Poor man's war -- rich man's fight: military integration in Republican Rome
99(17)
Marian Helm
7 "Take the sword away from that girl!" Combat, gender, and vengeance in the middle Republic
116(18)
John Serrati
8 The middle Republican soldier and systems of social distinction
134(20)
Kathryn H. Milne
9 Uncovering a "Lost Generation" in the senate: demography and the Hannibalic War
154(17)
Gary Barber
10 Titus Quinctius Flamininus' "Italian triumph"
171(20)
Michael P. Fronda
11 Ager publicus: land as a spoil of war in the Roman Republic
191(19)
Saskia T. Roselaar
12 The manipular army system and command decisions in the second century
210(22)
Jeremiah Mccall
13 Anecdotal history and the Social War
232(15)
Jessica H. Clark
14 SPQR SNAFU: indiscipline and internal conflict in the late Republic
247(20)
Lee L. Brice
15 From slave to citizen: the lessons of Servius Tullius
267(16)
Jack Wells
16 The transformation of the Roman army in the last decades of the Republic
283(14)
Francois Gauthier
17 Epilogue
297(12)
Nathan Rosenstein
Bibliography 309(32)
Index 341
Jeremy Armstrong is a Senior Lecturer in Ancient History at the University of Auckland, New Zealand. He received his BA from the University of New Mexico and his MLitt and PhD from the University of St Andrews. He works primarily on archaic central Italy, and most specifically early Roman warfare. He is the author of War and Society in Early Rome: From Warlords to Generals (2016) and the editor of a number of volumes, including Rituals of Triumph (2013) and Circum Mare: Themes in Ancient Warfare (2016).

Michael P. Fronda is Associate Professor in the Department of History and Classical Studies at McGill University. He received his PhD from The Ohio State University. He writes on Roman political and military history, interstate relations, and Roman and Pre-Roman Italy. He is the author of Between Rome and Carthage: Southern Italy during the Second Punic War (2010).