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Hardcover The Roman Near East: 31 BC-Ad 337, Book

ISBN: 0674778855

ISBN13: 9780674778856

The Roman Near East: 31 BC-Ad 337,

(Part of the Carl Newell Jackson Lectures Series)

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From Augustus to Constantine, the Roman Empire in the Near East expanded step by step, southward to the Red Sea and eastward across the Euphrates to the Tigris. In a remarkable work of interpretive history, Fergus Millar shows us this world as it was forged into the Roman provinces of Syria, Judaea, Arabia, and Mesopotamia. His book conveys the magnificent sweep of history as well as the rich diversity of peoples, religions, and languages that intermingle...

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Ancient History

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The Best we can do with what we've got

In his prologue to The Roman Near East, Fergus Millar claims that a small stone altar found at Dura-Europos encapsulates the intricate social reality found in the Roman Near East. The altar reads, "To the Ancestral God, Zeus Betylos, of those by the Orontes, Aurelios Diphilianos, soldier of the legion IV Scythica Antoniniana, has offered (this) in fulfilment [sic] of a prayer" (1). The text of this altar is inscribed in the Greek language by a Roman soldier to a Near Eastern god. With this example, not only does Millar demonstrate the complexities of linguistic and religious identity in the area, but also he shows the Roman Legions' importance to the Near East. Part one of The Roman Near East, entitled "Empire," is a chronological survey of Roman influence in the Near East. Millar primarily investigates Rome's military and political relationship with the Near East. This chronological survey begins with the Battle of Actium and ends with Constantine's formal recognition of the Christian Church. According to Millar, before AD 66 the Roman presence in the Near East was essentially a bridgehead against the Parthians. Rome's presence was minimally felt and the governments of the Near East were dependent kingdoms instead of being part of the provincial system. The Jewish War, however, drastically changed the political structure of the Near East. Millar writes, "It would be impossible to exaggerate the significance, from many different points of view, of the great revolt which broke out in Judaea in AD 66 and did not end until the suicide of the defenders of Masada in 74" (70). Not only did the war cause Rome to reevaluate its relationship with these dependent nations, but also the war occasioned Josephus's writings, the most important historical works of the first century. After the Jewish War, Rome's involvement in the Near East "came to resemble an integrated provincial and military system" (80). The emperors turned over administration to governors, and legions increasingly defended Roman interests from both outside threats and the local populations. According to Millar, by the end of Constantine's reign, the Near East was the "prime area where the long tradition of Roman imperialism was still active" (219). In part two, "Regions and Communities," Millar writes, "A social and economic history of the Near East in the Roman period cannot be written ... nothing is clearer than the fact that in this area above all we cannot speak of constant or enduring patterns of social and economic life" (225). In spite of this caveat, Millar attempts to write what cannot be written. He divides the Near East into six regions (Northern Syria, the Phoenician coast, Eastern Syria, Judaea and Syria Palestine, Arabia, and Mesopotamia) and briefly sketches the cultural and social concerns that faced these regions during the period of Roman domination. Instead of writing an annalesque total history of these six regions, Millar follows his sources where they

The ROMAN NEAR EAST: Synopsis of a Treasure

Millar describes the subject of his book as a threefold analysis, covering geography, chronology and linguistics. One of the major themes of the book is the treatment of data that lends insight into the mutual relations of the Roman government, the settled population and the peoples of the steppe-skenitai (tent-dwellers), nomads, Arabs (Saraceni). Roman military occupation did not correspond to any definite geographical boundaries due to the vast desert steppes that define the Limes Arabicus. Millar states that one of the primary factors fueling scholarly inquiry into this particular period from the mid-first century BC to the mid-fourth century AD is that, from the point of view of Roman imperial history, the step-by-step advancement of Roman direct control demonstrates that, in the Near East at least, Roman imperialism and expansionism was very much alive contrary to the opposing opinions of some. It also deals with the period that saw the rise of the "epigraphic habit" (inscriptions and record keeping) as expressed in the Near East, for it reveals a lot about political and communal structures at this time. He deals with politics and ethnicity, i.e. what political formations were present in this precarious desert frontier and how did people identify themselves? Millar defines the "Near East," according to the subject matter of his book, as the region of the Roman Empire where Greek (not Latin) co-existed with the family of Semitic languages.How far was the settled Roman frontier open to nomadic groups? How far did the inhabitants of a settled region share customs and culture (especially religious beliefs) with the Arab tribes of the marginal zone? These are the questions one is confronted with when studying the subject of the eastern frontier, and Millar treats it thoroughly and comprehensively. This book is valuable to serious historical investigators in search of scholarly research pertaining to this precarious region. Other important books to consider are: Roman Arabia by G.W. Bowersock, Hellenistic Civilization and the Jews by Victor Tcherikover, and Limits of Empire: The Roman Army in the East by Benjamin Isaacs.
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