ProQuest Dissertations - Historia Antigua
ProQuest Dissertations - Historia Antigua ProQuest Dissertations - Historia Antigua
Table of Contents:AcknowledgementsivAbstractvList of Tables and IllustrationsviiiChapter 1: Introduction 1Chapter 2: Colonies and the Senatorial Impetus to Colonize 53Chapter 3: Commissioners and Founding the Colony 96Chapter 4: Religious Landscape and Community Building 145Chapter 5: Religious Trends in the Mid-Republican Colonies 193Chapter 6: Conclusions 241Appendix 1: Primary Sources for the Colonial Commissioners 249Appendix 2: Magistracies Held by Commissioners 269Appendix 3: Colonial Commissioner Chart 278Bibliography 302vn
List of TablesFigure 5.1: Influences on Colonial Cults 230Appendix 3: Colonial Commissioner Chart 278List of IllustrationsFigure 1.1: The Statist Model of Roman Colonization 12Figure 1.2: Triadic Model of Colonization 23Figure 1.3: Colonial Agency Chart 26Figure 2.1: Salmon's History of Colonization 55Figure 2.2: A Commissioner's Impetus to Colonize 76Figure 3.1: Founding the Colony 97Figure 4.1: Abstract Model of the Colonial Landscape 154Figure 4.2: Religious Landscape Model of the Colonial Triangle 155
- Page 1 and 2: NOT EFFIGIES PAR VAE POPULI ROMAN!:
- Page 3 and 4: COPYRIGHTAmanda Jo Coles2009
- Page 5 and 6: AcknowledgementsI give heartfelt th
- Page 7: intention and colonial strategy hel
- Page 11 and 12: Instead, through examination of the
- Page 13 and 14: settlements in alien lands," and co
- 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
- Page 33 and 34: contact with Magna Graecia or incre
- 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
- Page 45 and 46: This section addresses continuity a
- 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
- Page 53 and 54: VI.Evidentiary CautionsLiteratureUn
- Page 55 and 56: two commissions, four of which mere
- Page 57 and 58: certain far-flung mid-Republican co
Table of Contents:AcknowledgementsivAbstractvList of Tables and IllustrationsviiiChapter 1: Introduction 1Chapter 2: Colonies and the Senatorial Impetus to Colonize 53Chapter 3: Commissioners and Founding the Colony 96Chapter 4: Religious Landscape and Community Building 145Chapter 5: Religious Trends in the Mid-Republican Colonies 193Chapter 6: Conclusions 241Appendix 1: Primary Sources for the Colonial Commissioners 249Appendix 2: Magistracies Held by Commissioners 269Appendix 3: Colonial Commissioner Chart 278Bibliography 302vn