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ROMANS IN GREECE. The relationships between Rome and the Greek world in the late Hellenistic age

Alessandra Pugliese-2014-01-01-Otago University Research Archive (University of Otago)
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TL;DRAbstract

The present study examines the relationships between Rome and the Greek world during a period which, approximately, spans from the sack of Corinth (146 BC) to the first Mithridatic war (89 BC). The objective is to understand the degree to which Roman influence penetrated into the spheres of Greek politics, society and economy, and, at the same time, to address the issue of Greek autonomy. Since Accame’s theory on the provincialization of Greece in 146 BC (Il dominio Romano in Grecia dalla guerra acaica ad Augusto, Rome 1946), the topic of the extent of Rome’s control over Greece after the bellum Achaicum has raised a lively debate among scholars. This work adds a further contribution to the knowledge of the interactions between Greeks and Romans by adopting a different perspective and focussing not simply on the evidence for acts of ‘official’ foreign policy, but, above all, on socio-economic factors. Through the careful analysis of documentary sources (occasionally corroborated by his

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The present study examines the relationships between Rome and the Greek world during a period which, approximately, spans from the sack of Corinth (146 BC) to the first Mithridatic war (89 BC). The objective is to understand the degree to which Roman influence penetrated into the spheres of Greek politics, society and economy, and, at the same time, to address the issue of Greek autonomy. Since Accame’s theory on the provincialization of Greece in 146 BC (Il dominio Romano in Grecia dalla guerra acaica ad Augusto, Rome 1946), the topic of the extent of Rome’s control over Greece after the bellum Achaicum has raised a lively debate among scholars. This work adds a further contribution to the knowledge of the interactions between Greeks and Romans by adopting a different perspective and focussing not simply on the evidence for acts of ‘official’ foreign policy, but, above all, on socio-economic factors. Through the careful analysis of documentary sources (occasionally corroborated by his

Keywords

ClassicsAncient historyHellenistic periodAncient GreekHistory

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