The Logistics of the Roman Army at War (264 B.C. - A.D.235)
Biographical note
Jonathan P. Roth, Ph.D. (1991) in History, Columbia University, is an Assistant Professor of History at San Jose State University. He has published a number of articles on Roman military history and is Secretary/Treasurer of the Society of Ancient Military Historians.
Readership
All those interested in the Roman army, ancient military history, the Roman Republic and Early Empire, the history of logistics, ancient economic history and military history in general.
Reviews
'...the first accessible account of this fascinating subject in English, R.'s book is guaranteed a place on every Roman military bookshelf.'
Duncan B. Campbell, Journal of Roman Studies, 2000.
'...a major contribution to the study of an important aspect of the functioning of the Roman army.'
Israel Shatzman, Scripta Classica Israelica, 2000.
'...this is the most comprehensive and detailed investigation on the subject to appear in English.'
Stefan G. Chrissanthos, Ancient History Bulletin, 1999.
Duncan B. Campbell, Journal of Roman Studies, 2000.
'...a major contribution to the study of an important aspect of the functioning of the Roman army.'
Israel Shatzman, Scripta Classica Israelica, 2000.
'...this is the most comprehensive and detailed investigation on the subject to appear in English.'
Stefan G. Chrissanthos, Ancient History Bulletin, 1999.
€37.50$49.50
Jonathan P. Roth
This work is devoted to a study fo Roman logistics from the Punic Wars through the Principate. It explores various aspects of supply: rations, trains, foraging, supply lines; administration and logistics in warfare. The book traces the increasing sophistication of the Roman military supply system.
€112.00$145.00
Edited by W.V. Harris, Columbia University
The product of a collaboration between scientists, historians and archaeologists, this book breaks new ground in the study of the long-term interaction between environmental factors, including climate, and human beings.
€165.00$229.00
Edited by W.V. Harris Columbia University
Mental Disorders in the Classical World seeks to show through interdisciplinary work how the first medical scientists and their lay contemporaries conceptualized mental disorders and attempted to diagnose, understand and treat them.
€96.00$133.00
Taco T. Terpstra, Columbia University
In Trading Communities, Taco Terpstra shows that long-distance trade in the Roman Empire was conducted through foreign trading communities living overseas, held together by ethnic and geographical identity.
€181.00$234.00
Caitlín E. Barrett
This book investigates Hellenistic popular religion through an interdisciplinary study of figurines of Egyptian deities from Delos. The results offer a new perspective on Hellenistic reinterpretations of Egyptian religion, as well as the relationship between “popular” and “official” cults.
€144.00$187.00
Edited by Francesco de Angelis
In the aim to understand the place of law within the landscape of Roman life, this volume explores the interaction between judicial practices and the spaces in which they took place. Through an interdisciplinary approach, it offers a new, multifaceted picture of a key aspect of Roman culture.
€122.00$158.00
Jinyu Liu
Based on a thorough examination of the epigraphic, legal, and literary sources on the collegia centonariorum, this volume offers a new understanding of their origins, functions, organizations, and social and legal status in the Roman Empire from the first century BC to fourth century AD.
€127.00$165.00
Edited by W.V. Harris and Brooke Holmes
This volume, containing fourteen papers given at a conference held at Columbia in 2007, is the most concerted attempt in recent times to understand the famous and enigmatic orator and to set him in his cultural, religious and political context.
€198.00$256.00
Federica Ciccolella
This book offers a study of four Greek grammars modelled on a Latin elementary grammar called Ianua of Donatus; they represent a tradition of Greek studies contemporaneous with, and parallel to, the "official" Byzantine-humanist grammar that made the revival of Greek in the West possible.
€110.00$142.00
Edited by Teodolinda Barolini and H. Wayne Storey
This volume addresses a far-reaching aspects of Petrarch research and interpretation: the essential interplay between Petrarch’s texts and their material preparation and reception. To read and interpret Petrarch we must come to grips with the fundamentals of Petrarchan philology.
€176.00$228.00
Annalisa Marzano
Drawing on documentary sources and archaeological evidence this book offers a socio-economic history of elite villas in Roman Central Italy and brings a new perspective to the debate on the slave-based villa system and the crisis of Italian villas in the imperial period.
- 1 of 3
- ››
No additional information