
Perhaps in defiance of expectations, Roman peace (pax) was a difficult concept that resisted any straightforward definition: not merely denoting the absence or aftermath of war, it consisted of many layers and associations and formed part of a much greater discourse on the nature of power and how Rome saw her place in the world. During the period from 50 BC to AD 75 - covering the collapse of the Republic, the subsequent civil wars, and the dawn of the Principate-the traditional meaning and language of peace came under extreme pressure as pax was co-opted to serve different strands of political discourse. This volume argues for its fundamental centrality in understanding the changing dynamics of the state and the creation of a new political system in the Roman Empire, moving from the debates over the content of the concept in the dying Republic to discussion of its deployment in the legitimization of the Augustan regime, first through the creation of an authorized version controlled by the princeps and then the ultimate crystallization of the pax augusta as the first wholly imperial concept of peace. Examining the nuances in the various meanings, applications, and contexts of Roman discourse on peace allows us valuable insight into the ways in which the dynamics of power were understood and how these were contingent on the political structures of the day. However it also demonstrates that although the idea of peace came to dominate imperial Rome's self-representation, such discourse was nevertheless only part of a wider discussion on the way in which the Empire conceptualized itself.
This volume investigates how the concept of 'pax' (peace) evolved from a contested political term during the late Roman Republic into a centralized instrument of imperial legitimacy under the Principate. Hannah Cornwell, a scholar of Roman history, utilizes a wide array of literary and epigraphic sources to trace the semantic shifts of peace. She argues that the transition from the Republic to the Empire was not merely a military or structural change, but a fundamental redefinition of political discourse where peace became a tool for the princeps to consolidate authority.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars and historians recognize this work as a rigorous contribution to the Oxford Classical Monographs series, noted for its precise linguistic analysis of Roman political terminology. Readers frequently highlight the academic density of the prose, which serves as a foundational text for those studying the legitimization strategies of the early Roman Empire.
Page Count:
268
Publication Date:
2017-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0192528149
ISBN-13:
9780192528148
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!