Brill’s Companion to Bodyguards in the Ancient Mediterranean: Brill's Companions to Classical Studies / Brill's Companions to Classical Studies: Warfare in the Ancient Mediterranean World, cartea 5
Mark Hebblewhite, Conor Whatelyen Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 dec 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004527676
ISBN-10: 9004527672
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Companions to Classical Studies / Brill's Companions to Classical Studies: Warfare in the Ancient Mediterranean World
ISBN-10: 9004527672
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Brill's Companions to Classical Studies / Brill's Companions to Classical Studies: Warfare in the Ancient Mediterranean World
Notă biografică
Conor Whately, Ph.D. (2009), Warwick University, is Associate Professor of Classics at the University of Winnipeg. He has published monographs, textbooks, and edited volumes on warfare, frontiers, and historiography in the Roman and Byzantine worlds, including Battles and Generals and Procopius on Soldiers and Military Institutions in the Sixth-Century Roman Empire, both published by Brill (2016, 2021).
Mark Hebblewhite completed his PhD at Macquarie University, Australia in 2012. His research interests centre on the ideology and politics of the later Roman Empire, with particular reference to the role of the army. His published work includes The Emperor And The Army In The Later Roman Empire and Theodosius and the Limits of Empire, both with Routledge. He currently works at the Australian Catholic University.
Contributors are: Jeremy Armstrong, Michael Charles, Maxime Emion, Matt Gibbs, Mark Hebblewhite, Carol J. King, Gwynaeth McIntyre, Christian Rollinger, Jeffrey Rop, Michael Stewart, Susan Thorpe, Emily Varto, Conor Whately, Shana Zaia.
Mark Hebblewhite completed his PhD at Macquarie University, Australia in 2012. His research interests centre on the ideology and politics of the later Roman Empire, with particular reference to the role of the army. His published work includes The Emperor And The Army In The Later Roman Empire and Theodosius and the Limits of Empire, both with Routledge. He currently works at the Australian Catholic University.
Contributors are: Jeremy Armstrong, Michael Charles, Maxime Emion, Matt Gibbs, Mark Hebblewhite, Carol J. King, Gwynaeth McIntyre, Christian Rollinger, Jeffrey Rop, Michael Stewart, Susan Thorpe, Emily Varto, Conor Whately, Shana Zaia.
Cuprins
Contents
Preface
Abbreviations
1 Bodyguards in the Ancient Mediterranean World
Conor Whately
2 Bodyguards in Ancient Egypt: Their Role as Protectors of the King
Susan Thorpe
3 Protecting the King in Mesopotamia in the First Millennium BCE: Perspectives from the Neo-Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian Empires
Shana Zaia
4 Bodyguards and the Connecting Ideology of Early Greek Warfare
Emily K. Varto
5 Apple Bearers and Kinsmen Cavalry: Guards Units of the Kings of Achaemenid Persia
Michael Charles
6 The Four Hundred and the Ten Thousand: The Politics of Greek Bodyguard Service in the Achaemenid Empire
Jeffrey Rop
7 Guarding the Macedonian King: Royal Servitude, Political Jockeying, and Regicide
Carol J. King
8 The Lictores: Guarding the Body and the Body Politic in Republican Rome
Jeremy Armstrong
9 “Bodyguards” and Their Responsibilities in Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt
Matt Gibbs
10 Making and Breaking Emperors: The cohors praetoria and the Transition of Imperial Power
Gwynaeth McIntyre
11 Specie Dominationis: The ‘Ceremonial’ Uses of Imperial Bodyguards Under the Principate
Christian Rollinger
12 Guarding the Emperor in an Age of Chaos
Mark Hebblewhite
13 Protectors and Assassins: Armed Eunuch-cubicularii and -spatharii, 400–532 CE
Michael Edward Stewart
14 Epilogue on Bodyguards
Maxime Emion
Index
Preface
Abbreviations
1 Bodyguards in the Ancient Mediterranean World
Conor Whately
2 Bodyguards in Ancient Egypt: Their Role as Protectors of the King
Susan Thorpe
3 Protecting the King in Mesopotamia in the First Millennium BCE: Perspectives from the Neo-Assyrian and Neo-Babylonian Empires
Shana Zaia
4 Bodyguards and the Connecting Ideology of Early Greek Warfare
Emily K. Varto
5 Apple Bearers and Kinsmen Cavalry: Guards Units of the Kings of Achaemenid Persia
Michael Charles
6 The Four Hundred and the Ten Thousand: The Politics of Greek Bodyguard Service in the Achaemenid Empire
Jeffrey Rop
7 Guarding the Macedonian King: Royal Servitude, Political Jockeying, and Regicide
Carol J. King
8 The Lictores: Guarding the Body and the Body Politic in Republican Rome
Jeremy Armstrong
9 “Bodyguards” and Their Responsibilities in Ptolemaic and Roman Egypt
Matt Gibbs
10 Making and Breaking Emperors: The cohors praetoria and the Transition of Imperial Power
Gwynaeth McIntyre
11 Specie Dominationis: The ‘Ceremonial’ Uses of Imperial Bodyguards Under the Principate
Christian Rollinger
12 Guarding the Emperor in an Age of Chaos
Mark Hebblewhite
13 Protectors and Assassins: Armed Eunuch-cubicularii and -spatharii, 400–532 CE
Michael Edward Stewart
14 Epilogue on Bodyguards
Maxime Emion
Index