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Death and Renewal: Volume 2
Sociological Studies in Roman History
This is a book for Roman historians which will also be of interest to sociologists.
Keith Hopkins (Author)
9780521271172, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 27 June 1985
304 pages
22.9 x 15 x 1.7 cm, 0.454 kg
'The essays on death are spectacular tours de force.' Andrew Lintott, The Times Higher Education Supplement
This is a volume of studies concerned with death and its impact on the social order. The first topic considered is gladiatorial combat; not merely popular entertainment, it was also an important element in Roman politics. The book then investigates the composition of the political elite in the late Republic and Principate (249 BC – AD 235), showing that ideals of hereditary succession disguised high rates of social mobility. The final chapter ranges over aristocratic death rituals and tombs, funerals and ghost stories, to the search for immortality and the power of the Roman dead in distributing property by written wills.
1. Murderous games
2. Political succession in the late Republic (249–50 BC) Keith Hopkins and Graham Burton
3. Ambition and withdrawal: the senatorial aristocracy under the emperors Keith Hopkins and Graham Burton
4. Death in Rome
Bibliography
Indexes.
Subject Areas: General & world history [HBG]