51 research outputs found
Changes in the Roman Empire: essays in the ordinary Princeton legacy library./ Ramsay MacMullen.
Includes bibliographical references and index.1 online resource (414 p.)
Why Do We Do What We Do? Motivation in History and the Social Sciences
Why we do what we do is a matter of great interest to everyone, and everyone seems to have had their say about it â philosophers, sociologists, anthropologists, psychologists, economists, and historians perhaps the most, case by case. Occasionally the specialists have offered their ideas to a general readership, but mostly they prefer to speak to and with their fellows in their particular disciplines. To evaluate and compare their findings in a cross-disciplinary way is now for the first time attempted, by Ramsay MacMullen. Emeritus history professor from Yale University, he is the recipient of various academic awards, including a lifetime Award for Scholarly Distinction from the American Historical Association
Barbarian Enclaves in the Northern Roman Empire
Besides the barbarians admitted to the army, hundreds of thousands were received â men, women, and children â into the Roman empire, to be settled in reservations. The practise is of significance from the late second century on. Archaeology reveals signs of perhaps ten tribes represented in France, Germany, and the Low Countries. What is interesting about them is the increasing tenacity with which they retained their own traditions of pottery, jewelry, and burial, against the slowly decreasing power of Romanization.MacMullen Ramsay. Barbarian Enclaves in the Northern Roman Empire. In: L'antiquitĂ© classique, Tome 32, fasc. 2, 1963. pp. 552-561
Paganism and Christianity, 100-425 C.E. : A Sourcebook
Minneapolisxiv, 296 p.; 23 cm
Constantine and the Miraculous
Constantineâs experience of omens and miracles and use of apotropaic magical symbols, at first pagan then Christian, fits with a long tradition, then strengthening, of such beliefs. <!--EndFragment--
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