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| List of Illustrations | p. xv |
| List of Maps | p. xvi |
| List of Contributors | p. xvii |
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| Peoples of temperate Europe before the Roman conquest | p. 8 |
| Introduction | p. 8 |
| Geography | p. 9 |
| The Late Bronze Age background | p. 11 |
| Towns, trade, and status in the Early Iron Age (800-450 BC) | p. 13 |
| New styles and chang... MORE | p. 17 |
| Larger communities and public ritual (400-150 BC) | p. 19 |
| Urban centres of the Late Iron Age | p. 22 |
| The native peoples and Rome | p. 25 |
| Approaches to understanding changes at the end of the Iron Age | p. 29 |
| The Roman Republic: political history | p. 32 |
| From monarchy to Republic | p. 33 |
| The early Republic (c.509-338) | p. 36 |
| The middle Republic (c.338-218): formalization of the state | p. 39 |
| Foreign relations to the end of the Hannibalic War | p. 42 |
| World domination, political strife | p. 51 |
| The end of the Republic | p. 60 |
| The Roman Empire from Augustus to Diocletian | p. 69 |
| Europe in the empire | p. 72 |
| The sources | p. 78 |
| From triumvir to princeps | p. 81 |
| Government: city and empire | p. 83 |
| The governing class | p. 87 |
| The emperor and the army | p. 91 |
| The transmission of power: Tiberius to the Antonines | p. 95 |
| Centre and periphery | p. 97 |
| The Augustan settlement renegotiated | p. 101 |
| The principate in crisis | p. 104 |
| The empire at the accession of Diocletian | p. 107 |
| Roman society | p. 109 |
| The Roman household | p. 112 |
| familia, domus and social networks | p. 129 |
| Conclusion | p. 133 |
| Warfare and the Army | p. 135 |
| War: what is it good for? | p. 139 |
| Who did the fighting? | p. 149 |
| War and society: Rome and Italy | p. 165 |
| The impact of war: the empire | p. 166 |
| Economy and trade | p. 170 |
| Introduction | p. 170 |
| Production | p. 172 |
| Labour | p. 180 |
| Distribution and trade | p. 181 |
| Consumption and services | p. 189 |
| Coinage and monetization | p. 193 |
| City and countryside | p. 198 |
| The third century and after | p. 199 |
| The Roman European economy in the perspective of the longue duree | p. 201 |
| Religions | p. 203 |
| A history divine | p. 203 |
| The shock of the old | p. 206 |
| sacra publica-the 'state religion' | p. 212 |
| sacra priuata | p. 216 |
| North-western Europe | p. 217 |
| The empire: the third century AD | p. 225 |
| Christianity | p. 231 |
| The cultural implications of the Roman conquest | p. 234 |
| The problem | p. 234 |
| Politics, law, and language | p. 240 |
| Cities, architecture, and art | p. 250 |
| Landscapes and communities | p. 260 |
| Conclusion | p. 263 |
| The fourth century | p. 265 |
| Introduction | p. 265 |
| A brief history of the fourth century | p. 268 |
| Rome in the fourth century | p. 273 |
| The wandering imperial 'capital': Trier, Milan, and Aquileia | p. 278 |
| 'Cadavers of half-ruined cities': towns of fourth-century Roman Europe | p. 281 |
| Urban defences | p. 286 |
| Defence in the countryside: the return to oppida | p. 288 |
| The countryside | p. 290 |
| Paganism and Christianity beyond the imperial 'capitals' | p. 293 |
| Conclusion: being Roman in fourth-century Europe | p. 296 |
| Peoples beyond the Roman imperial frontiers | p. 299 |
| Introduction | p. 299 |
| Roman representations of barbarians | p. 299 |
| Warlike barbarians | p. 301 |
| Archaeology of the peoples beyond the frontiers | p. 303 |
| Dynamics of change from the third to the fifth century | p. 319 |
| The archaeology of interaction in the frontier zone | p. 326 |
| Further Reading | p. 329 |
| Chronology | p. 343 |
| Maps | p. 359 |
| Index | p. 367 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |