Description
This work sets forth a challenging new model for understanding the communities of Roman Italy, their internal dynamics, and their relationships with their surrounding rural territories. Extensive notes, a substantial and up-to-date bibliography, and an adequate index complete this pivotal work. Essential for the study of ancient social conditions or private life. -- J. G. Schovanek, American Library Association
About the Author
Stephen L. Dyson is Park Professor of Classics at the University at Buffalo and past president of the Archaeological Institute of America. He has done extensive archaeological fieldwork in Italy and has published on the Roman frontier, Roman community, and the history of classical archaeology.
Reviews
Resourceful and imaginative, [Dyson] looks into the humdrum, sometimes quietly desperate lives of Italy's small towns and urban centers and brings them sharply to life. Vergilius A valuable example of how archaeological data can be used alongside conventional sources to produce compelling social and economic history. -- Keith Bradley American Historical Review An important addition to the literature on classical Rome... Highly recommended. Choice 2010
Book Information
ISBN 9780801867606
Author Stephen L. Dyson
Format Paperback
Page Count 400
Imprint Johns Hopkins University Press
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Weight(grams) 544g