ProQuest Dissertations - Historia Antigua
ProQuest Dissertations - Historia Antigua ProQuest Dissertations - Historia Antigua
For my parents, Gary and Barbara Coles, who made this possible.iii
AcknowledgementsI give heartfelt thanks to my dissertation committee: Dr. Campbell Grey for his patiencewhile I developed my ideas into something worth reading; Dr. James Ker for hisinsightful and impossibly swift comments; Dr. Jeremy Mclnerney for seeing me throughmy coursework; and Dr. Brian Rose, for giving me time despite his hectic schedule. Mygratitude also goes to Dr. Susan Alcock and Dr. Edward Bispham for their earlycomments. I would like to thank the American Academy in Rome, the American Schoolof Classical Studies at Athens, and the Luther I. Replogle Foundation, which granted methe Oscar Broneer Traveling Fellowship for study at the AAR in 2008-2009. Throughthese institutions I was able to see most of the colonies about which I write.During my travels in Italy, Dr. Alessandra Tanzilli of the Museo delle MediaValle del Liri in Sora and Dr. Francesca Minak of the Museo della Citta di Rimini wereespecially generous with their time and knowledge of the archaeological discoveries intheir cities. Thanks also to the staff at these two institutions, as well as at the MuseoCivico Archeologico e Etnologico in Modena, the Museo Archeologico Oliveriano inPesaro, the Museo Provinciale Sannitico in Campobasso, and the Museo Archeologico diFregellae in Ceprano. They were all helpful beyond the call of duty.For their camaraderie and helpful advice, I thank Roshan Abraham, KathrynMilne, Lisa Mallen, Patricia Larash, Fabio Guidetti, Sarah Wahlberg, Erin Moodie,Anastasia Poulos, Chris Baron, Susan Curry, and Sarah Cornell. Last but in no way least,I thank my parents, Barb and Gary Coles, and my sister, Caryn Hall, for supporting me asI worked toward becoming the first person in our family to earn a Ph.D.iv
- Page 1 and 2: NOT EFFIGIES PAR VAE POPULI ROMAN!:
- Page 3: COPYRIGHTAmanda Jo Coles2009
- Page 7 and 8: intention and colonial strategy hel
- Page 9 and 10: List of TablesFigure 5.1: Influence
- Page 11 and 12: Instead, through examination of the
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- Page 15 and 16: in the late fourth century BCE; thu
- Page 17 and 18: Aquileia in 181 BCE.Bispham also il
- Page 19 and 20: II.Agency in Roman ColonizationFind
- Page 21 and 22: Figure 1.1:The Statist Model ofRoma
- Page 23 and 24: comparisons between religion in the
- Page 25 and 26: BCE, when Roman power expanded and
- Page 27 and 28: nomenclature of Paestum shows a mix
- Page 29 and 30: determinant factors in the relation
- Page 31 and 32: were soft and wealthy.In part, the
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- Page 35 and 36: Reports to senate,founds templesGen
- Page 37 and 38: defined landscape. The landscape wa
- Page 39 and 40: neighbors: "[d]espite its undeniabl
- Page 41 and 42: Roman religion, there was also no r
- Page 43 and 44: propitiate. 113Yet, C. Marius was a
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- Page 47 and 48: Capodifiume for at least the first
- Page 49 and 50: Was Roman Religion Imposed on the C
- Page 51 and 52: The Capitolium IssueEven as the gen
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For my parents, Gary and Barbara Coles, who made this possible.iii