Week 1: Introduction
What is Empire?
Week 2: Polybius, Symploke, and Roman Conquest Culture
Secondary Readings:
-Walbank F.W. and Kagan D. “Symploke: its role in Polybius’ Histories.” In Studies in the Greek Historians. Cambridge University Press (1975): 197-212.
-Rich, J. “Warlords and the Roman Republic.” In War, Warlords, and Interstate Relations in the Ancient Mediterranean (2017): 266-294.
Sources:
Polybius 1.1-13
Week 3: Metrocentric
Secondary Readings:
-Rich, J. “Greed Fear, Greed, and Glory: The Causes of Roman War Making in the Middle Republic.” In War and Society in the Roman World (1993): 38-68.
-Harris, “On War and Greed in the Second Century BC” The American Historical Review, Vol. 76, No. 5 (1971): 1371-1385.
Sources:
Champion, Roman Imperialism (selections)
Week 4: Pericentric
Secondary Readings:
-Champion, G. “Empire by Invitation: Greek Political Strategies and Roman Imperial Interventions in the Second Century B.C.E.” TAPA Vol. 137 No. 2 (2007): 255-275.
-Burton, P.J. Friendship and Empire: Roman Diplomacy and Imperialism in the Middle Republic (353–146 BC). Cambridge University Press; (2011): selections
Sources:
Champion, Roman Imperialism (selections)
Week 5: Realist
Secondary Readings:
-Eckstein, A. Mediterranean Anarchy, Interstate War, and the Rise of Rome. University of California Press (2009): selections
-Crawford, M. “Rome and the Greek World: Economic Relationships” The Economic History Review, Vol. 30, No. 1 (1977): 42-52.
Sources:
Champion, Roman Imperialism (selections)
Week 6: Spain, Rome’s Imperial Experiment
Short Response paper due
Secondary Readings:
- Sánchez Moreno, E. “Imperialism and Multipolarity in the Far West: Beyond the Lusitanians (237–146 BC)” War, Warlords, and Interstate Relations in the Ancient Mediterranean (2017): 326-350.
- Ñaco del Hoyo, T. and Principal, J. “Q. Sertorius: A Warlord in Hispania?” In War, Warlords, and Interstate Relations in the Ancient Mediterranean (2017): 380-414.
Sources: Plutarch, Life of Sertorius
Appian, Spanish Wars
Week 7: The Hannibalic Wars and the Conquest of Southern Italy and North Africa
-Neville, M. “‘Carthage Must Be Destroyed’: The Dynamics of Roman Imperialism.” The Roman Empire: Roots of Imperialism, Pluto Press, 2010: 14–37.
-Fronda, M.P. and Gauthier, F. “Italy and Sicily in the Second Punic War: Multipolarity, Minor Powers, and Local Military Entrepreneurialism” In War, Warlords, and Interstate Relations in the Ancient Mediterranean (2017): 308-325.
Sources:
Livy, Books 21-30 (selections)
Plutarch, Life of Cato the Elder (selections)
Appian, Punic Wars (selections)
Week 8: The Macedonian Wars and the Conquest of Greece
Secondary Readings:
-Champion, G. “Conquest, Liberation, Protectionism, or Enslavement? Mid-Republican Rome from a Greek Perspective” In War, Warlords, and Interstate Relations in the Ancient Mediterranean (2017): 254-265.
-Eckstein, A. “T. Quinctius Flamininus and the Campaign against Philip in 198 B. C.” Phoenix Vol. 30, No. 2 (1976) 119–42.
Sources:
Livy, Book 45 (selections)
Plutarch, Life of Flamininus (selections)
Polybius, Book 18 (selections)
Week 9: The Wars for Coele-Syria and Roman Entrance into Asia
Sources:
Polybius, Book 16 (selections)
Week 10: Consequences of Expansion: Land, Labor, and the crisis of 133
Secondary Readings:
-Hopkins K. Conquerors and Slaves. (1981) Cambridge University Press: Chapter 1: The Impact of Conquering an Empire on the Political Economy of Italy.
Sources:
Plutarch, Life of T. Gracchus (selections)
Plutarch, Life of G. Gracchus (selections)
Appian, Civil Wars, Book 1 (selections)
Week 11: Subject peoples
Readings:
Erskine, Roman Imperialism, Chapter 4 and selected sources (appendix)
Week 12
Presentations and Peer Review
Week 13
Presentations and Peer Review
Week 14
Presentations and Peer Review