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Michael Arnheim
Why Rome Fell
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Страница 1
Why Rome Fell
Decline and Fall, or Drift and Change?
Страница 3
Страница 4
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About the Author
Preface
Introduction
Why Did the West Fall?
“Indissoluble Union and Easy Obedience”
Divided Loyalties in a Fractured Society
“The madness of the heretics must be curbed” (CTh 16.5.65.)
So What?
East Is East, and West Is West
Gothia or Romania?
Three Revolutions
Structural or Individual?
The Use of the Past
Страница 19
1 Rome From Monarchy to Monarchy
Section A. From Romulus to Diocletian
Relics of Monarchy
“Republic” and Democracy
From One Brutus to Another
“In the Consulship of Julius and Caesar”
The Fall of the Republic
The Gracchi Brothers
Gaius Marius
Sulla
Pompey
Julius Caesar
Caesar’s Heir
Avoiding Julius Caesar’s Mistake
The Transmogrification of an Equestrian
Augustus’s Autobiography (
Res Gestae Divi Augusti
)
Did Augustus Wield Sole Power?
Augustus: “Optimi Status Auctor”?
From Tiberius to Diocletian
Section B. Two Disquieting Tendencies
“The Fourth Century and the ‘Conflict of the Orders’ Belong in the Realm of Myth.”
Conflict of the Orders
“Monopoly of Office and Power”
Patronage or Clientela
Polybius Was Right
What Polybius Actually Said
Formal Rights vs. Practical Realization
“Elective Dictatorship”
“Significance of Graduated Voting Absurdly Exaggerated”
“Rem Publicam…in Senatus Populique Romani Arbitrium Transtuli”
Mommsen’s “Dyarchy”
Syme: “A Monarchy Rules through an Oligarchy”
Envoi: Augustus v. Alexander
The Roman Republic as “Direct Democracy”
The Roman Revolution
“The First Emperor”
2 Diocletian Hammer of the Aristocracy
Principate to Dominate
Pomp and Ceremony
The Imperial Cult
The Great Persecution
Julian on Augustus and Diocletian
Imperial Power
Was Diocletian an Autocrat?
Princeps Legibus Solutus Est
The Tetrarchy
Diocletian Chopped the Provinces into Pieces
Titles of Honor
Emperor and Senatorial Aristocracy
Eunuchs
Conclusion
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