noTEs
141
36. Quoted in Vance,
Victorians and Ancient Rome
, p. 231.
37. Mattingly, D.W. (ed.),
Dialogues in Roman Imperialism: power, discourse,
and discrepant experience in the Roman Empire
(Portsmouth, RI:
Journal of
Roman Archaeology
Supplementary Series 23, 1997); Hingley, R.,
Roman
Officers and English Gentlemen: the imperial origins of Roman archaeology
(London & New York: Routledge, 2000); Hingley, R.,
Globalizing Roman
Culture: unity, diversity and empire
(London & New York: Routledge, 2005).
38. Woolf, G., ‘Inventing empire in ancient Rome’, in Alcock, S.E., et al. (eds),
Empires
, pp. 311–22.
39. Webster, J. & Cooper, N. (eds),
Roman imperialism: post-colonial perspectives
(Leicester: Leicester Archaeology Monographs, 1996); Hardwick, L. &
Gillespie, C. (eds),
Classics in Post-Colonial Worlds
(Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2007).
40. e.g. Huntington, S.P.,
The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World
Order
(New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996).
41. On this passage, and other prophecies in the
Aeneid
about Roman greatness,
see Zetzel, J.E.G., ‘Rome and its traditions’, in Martindale, C. (ed.),
The
Cambridge Companion to Virgil
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1997), pp. 188–203.
chapTEr 1
1. History of the Punic wars: clear summary by Gargola, D.A., ‘Mediterranean
empire (264–134)’, in Rosenstein, N. & Morstein-Marx, R. (eds),
A Companion
to the Roman Republic
(Malden & Oxford: Blackwell, 2006), pp. 147–66;
more detailed accounts in Goldsworthy, A.,
The Punic Wars
(London: Cassell,
2000); Hoyos, B.D.,
Unplanned Wars: the origins of the First and Second Punic
Wars
(Berlin & New York: de Gruyter, 1998); Lazenby, J.F.,
Hannibal’s War
(Warminster: Aris & Phillips, 1978). On the history of Carthage, Lancel, S.,
Carthage: a history
, trans. Neill, A. (Oxford: Blackwell, 1995).
2. Ridley, R.T., ‘To be taken with a pinch of salt: the destruction of Carthage’,
Classical Philology
, 1986 (81), pp. 140–6.
3. For general discussions of ‘Roman imperialism’, see Garnsey, P.D.A. &
Whittaker, C.R., ‘Introduction’, in Garnsey & Whittaker (eds),
Imperialism
in the Ancient World
(Cambridge: Cambridge Philological Society, 1976),
pp. 1–6; Champion, C.B. & Eckstein, A.M., ‘Introduction: the study of
Roman imperialism’, in Champion (ed.),
Roman Imperialism: readings
and sources
(Malden & Oxford: Blackwell, 2004), pp. 1–10; Eckstein,
A.M., ‘Conceptualising Roman imperial expansion under the republic: an
introduction’, in Rosenstein & Morstein-Marx,
Companion to the Roman
Republic
, pp. 567–89.
4. Brunt, P.A., ‘Laus imperii’, in Garnsey & Whittaker,
Imperialism in the Ancient
World
, pp. 159–91.
5. For a summary and critique of defensive imperialism, Harris, W.V.,
War and
Imperialism in Republican Rome 327–70 BC
(Oxford: Oxford University
Press, 1979), pp. 163–54.
6. de Sepulveda, Gines, (1550) and de Vitoria, Francisco, (1539), cited and
discussed by Lupher, D.A.,
Romans in a New World: classical models in
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