Roman political leaders used distance from Rome as a key political tool to assert pre-eminence. Through the case studies of Caesar’s hegemony, Augustus’s autocracy, and Tiberius’s reign, this book examines how these figures’ experiences and manipulations of absence established a multipolar focus of political life centred less on the city of Rome, and more on the idea of a single leader. The Roman expansion over Italy and the Mediterranean put the political system under considerable stress, and eventually resulted in a dispersal of leadership and a decentralization of power. Absent generals rivalled their peers in Rome for influence and threatened to surpass them from the provinces. Roman leaders, from Sulla to Tiberius, used absence as a mechanism to act autonomously, but it came at the cost of losing influence and control at the centre. In order to hold influence while being split off from the decision-making powers of the geographical nucleus that was Rome, communication channels to mitigate necessary absences were developed during this period, such as travel, intermediate meetings, letters (propaganda writings) and a complex network of mediators, ultimately forming the circle from which the imperial court emerged. Absent leadership, as it developed throughout the Late Republic, a hitherto neglected issue, eventually became a valuable asset in the institutionalising process of the autocracy of Caesar, Augustus, and Tiberius.
Ralph Lange
Leading Rome from a Distance, 300 BCE 37 CE [PDF ebook]
Asserting Autocracy through Absence
Leading Rome from a Distance, 300 BCE 37 CE [PDF ebook]
Asserting Autocracy through Absence
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Språk Engelska ● Formatera PDF ● Sidor 248 ● ISBN 9781350325418 ● Utgivare Bloomsbury Publishing ● Publicerad 2024 ● Nedladdningsbara 3 gånger ● Valuta EUR ● ID 9618349 ● Kopieringsskydd Adobe DRM
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