142
ThE roman EmpIrE
7. Baring, E., Earl of Cromer,
Ancient and Modern Imperialism
[1910] (Honolulu:
University
Press of the Pacific, 2001), pp. 19–20.
8. For example, the term does not appear in the index of Flower, H. (ed.),
The
Cambridge Companion to the Roman Republic
(Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2004).
9. Morley, N.,
Theories, Models and Concepts in Ancient History
(New York
& London:
Routledge, 2004).
10. Frank, T.,
Roman Imperialism
(New York:
Macmillan, 1914), pp. 120–1.
11. See generally Betts, R.F., ‘The allusion to Rome in British imperialist thought
of the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries’,
Victorian Studies
, 1971
(15), pp. 149–59.
12. Lucas, C.P.,
Greater Rome and Greater Britain
(Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1912), p. 59.
13. Bukharin, N.,
Imperialism and World Economy
[1915] (London: Bookmarks,
2003), pp. 118–19.
14. Ibid., p. 119. Generally on Marxist approaches, Brewer, A.,
Marxist Theories
of Imperialism: a critical survey
(2nd edn) (London & New York: Routledge,
1990).
15.
See generally Kemp, T.,
Theories of Imperialism
(London: Dennis Dobson,
1967).
16. cf. Scheidel, W., ‘Sex and empire: a Darwinian perspective’, in Morris, I.
& Scheidel, W. (eds),
The Dynamics of Ancient Empires
(Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2009), pp. 255–324.
17. Lenin, V.I.,
Imperialism, the Highest Stafe of Capitalism
(Peking: Foreign
Languages Press, 1970), p. 97.
18. See generally Rosenstein & Morstein-Marx,
Companion to the Roman
Republic
.
19. Whitmarsh, T.,
Greek Literature and the Roman Empire
(Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2001), and further discussion in Ch. 4 below.
20. See above, all the discussions in North, J.A., ‘The development of Roman
imperialism’,
Journal of Roman Studies
, 1981 (71), pp. 1–9, and Rich,
J., ‘Fear, greed and glory: the causes of Roman war-making in the middle
Republic’, in Rich, J. & Shipley, G. (eds),
War and Society in the Roman
World
(New York & London: Routledge, 1993), pp. 38–68; more generally,
Reynolds, C.,
Modes of Imperialism
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1981),
pp. 124–71.
21. Wiseman, T.P.,
Roman Drama and Roman History
(Exeter: Exeter University
Press, 1998).
22. Raaflaub, K., ‘Born to be wolves? Origins of Roman imperialism’, in Wallace,
R.W. & Harris, E.M. (eds),
Transitions to Empire: essays in Greco-Roman
history 360–146 BC
(Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 1996),
pp. 271–314.
23. Harris,
War and Imperialism
,
pp. 54–130.
24. Richardson, J.,
Hispaniae: Spain and the development of Roman imperialism,
218–82 BC
(Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 1986).
25. North, ‘Development of Roman imperialism’.
26. Polybius, 32.13.7–9.
27. Eckstein, ‘Conceptualising’, pp. 570–1.
28. See further Ch. 3 below.
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