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Hostages and Hostage-Taking in the Roman Empire

Hostages and Hostage-Taking in the Roman Empire | Livres anciens et modernes | Allen Joel

Livres anciens et modernes
Allen Joel
Cambridge University Press (8 maggio 2006),
90,00 €
(Roma, Italie)

Mode de Paiement

Détails

  • Auteur
  • Allen Joel
  • Éditeurs
  • Cambridge University Press (8 maggio 2006)
  • Thème
  • Classica Ancient Rome Greece
  • Description
  • As New
  • Description
  • H
  • Jaquette
  • True
  • Etat de conservation
  • Comme neuf
  • Reliure
  • Couverture rigide
  • Dédicacée
  • False
  • Premiére Edition
  • False

Description

8vo, pp.316. This book examines hostage-taking in ancient Rome, which was a standard practice of international diplomacy. Hundreds of foreign hostages, typically adolescents, were detained as the empire grew in the Republic and early Principate. As prominent figures at the center of diplomacy and as 'exotic' representatives of the outside world, they drew considerable attention in Roman literature and other artistic media. Our sources discuss hostages in terms of the geopolitics that motivated their detention, as well as in accordance with other comparable structures of power. Hostages, thus, could be located in a social hierarchy, a family network, in a cultural continuum, or in a sexual role. In these schemes, an individual Roman, or Rome in general, becomes not just a conqueror, but also a patron, father, teacher, or generically male. By focusing on the characterizations of hostages in Roman culture, we glean Roman attitudes toward ethnicity and imperial power

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