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Home arrow eBook Categories arrow History arrow Rome and the Enemy: Imperial Strategy in the Principate

Rome and the Enemy: Imperial Strategy in the Principate

Ebook - History
Thursday, 17 August 2006
rome.and.the.enemy

By Susan P. Mattern, The University of California Press , November 1999

"A truly significant contribution to the discussion of Roman ideology. . . . This is an important book, and its readers will learn a great deal about Roman aristocratic culture."

"The book is as well written as it is well informed, and historians who are interested in the nature of imperial power, in any period, will find it valuable."

Rome and the Enemy provides a fascinating look into the Roman mind in addition to a compelling reexamination of Roman conceptions of warfare and national honor. The resulting picture creates a new understanding of Rome's long mastery of the Mediterranean world.

Susan P. Mattern is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Georgia.

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Book Description:

How did the Romans build and maintain one of the most powerful and stable empires in the history of the world? This illuminating book draws on the literature, especially the historiography, composed by the members of the elite who conducted Roman foreign affairs. From this evidence, Susan P. Mattern reevaluates the roots, motivations, and goals of Roman imperial foreign policy especially as that policy related to warfare. In a major reinterpretation of the sources, Rome and the Enemy shows that concepts of national honor, fierce competition for status, and revenge drove Roman foreign policy, and though different from the highly rationalizing strategies often attributed to the Romans, dictated patterns of response that remained consistent over centuries.

Mattern reconstructs the world view of the Roman decision-makers, the emperors, and the elite from which they drew their advisers. She discusses Roman conceptions of geography, strategy, economics, and the influence of traditional Roman values on the conduct of military campaigns. She shows that these leaders were more strongly influenced by a traditional, stereotyped perception of the enemy and a drive to avenge insults to their national honor than by concepts of defensible borders. In fact, the desire to enforce an image of Roman power was a major policy goal behind many of their most brutal and aggressive campaigns.

 

 

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