About This Book
The work surveys the Roman Empire's provinces and populations from the age of Caesar to Diocletian, offering regional studies that range from northern Italy, Spain, and the Gallic provinces to Britain, the Danube lands, Greece, Asia Minor, the Euphrates frontier, Syria, Judea, and Egypt. Each chapter combines geography, administrative organization, military concerns, and the social and cultural conditions of local peoples, while tracing frontier conflicts, provincial governance, and mechanisms of Roman incorporation. The author also reflects on the uneven nature of surviving sources and the need for maps to visualize provincial relations, aiming to present a coherent provincial portrait that complements general narratives of imperial rule.
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