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AUTHOR

Marietta Horster

showing 2 related works from this author

Coinage and images of the imperial family: local identity and Roman rule

2013

In his speech “About harmony between the cities”, Publius Aelius Aristides, the famous orator of the mid-2nd c. A.D., admonishes the three most eminent cities of Asia — Pergamum, Ephesus and Smyrna — to put an end to their rivalries. He regards as useless their envy and struggle to be first among the cities in the province of Asia. He cautions against such rivalries, which could lead to an unwanted intervention by Roman authorities. He continues (Or. 23 [Keil = 42 Dindorf] 62): Is there a child or an old man so much out of mind that he would ignore that this is our present situation and that this is thank heaven the ruling law: one city, the first and greatest, has the whole world under one…

ArcheologyHarmony (color)HistoryVisual Arts and Performing Artsbiologymedia_common.quotation_subjectbiology.organism_classificationSmyrnaEliteRhetorical deviceRhetoricEmperorHeavenClassicsGovernorClassicsmedia_commonJournal of Roman Archaeology
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Urban Infrastructure and Euergetism Outside the City of Rome

2015

This chapter explores the connection between the monumentalization of cities, the use of local resources, and the involvement of benefactors in civic building operations. At its peak the Roman Empire comprised a mosaic of some two thousand flourishing cities. For the establishment and maintenance of their infrastructure, they benefited in large part from the contributions of wealthy citizens and, in some situations, of outside sponsors. This chapter uses epigraphic evidence to explain what financial resources cities had at their disposal and who was responsible for benefactions that benefited the communities and their inhabitants. It also discusses the nature of the benefactions and what su…

Economic growthEconomyEuergetismUrbanizationPolitical scienceUrban infrastructure
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