Journal ArticleDOI
The Excavations at Dura-Europos
About:
This article is published in Art Bulletin.The article was published on 1931-09-01. It has received 46 citations till now.read more
Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Writing the Legions: The Development and Future of Roman Military Studies in Britain
TL;DR: The province of Britannia and the Roman world as a whole were largely created and maintained by martial means as mentioned in this paper, and while Roman military studies in Britain achieved much during the last century, it is argued here that they have become isolated, theoretically stagnant and increasingly marginalized.
Dissertation
Hollow archives: Bullae as a source for understanding administrative structures in the Seleukid empire
TL;DR: Seal impressions on bullae offer new ways of approaching the local realities of Seleukid administrative and fiscal practice as discussed by the authors, and the interactions that are evidenced by several individuals impressing their seals on a single bulla enables a range of aspects of royal bureaucracy in Babylonia to be reconstructed.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Fiscus in the First Two Centuries
TL;DR: The early Principate tends to be interpreted in terms of the constitutional forms in which it was clothed and the administrative innovations which it brought, to the neglect of those, largely unchanged, social and economic factors which shaped the actual working of Roman politics as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI
New approach to the study of city planning and domestic dwellings in the ancient Near East
TL;DR: In this article, the authors presented the results of a magnetic survey on the Hellenistic and Roman site of Doura-Europos in Syria, where the interpretation of the magnetic data is based on an original approach by considering the use of space in a domestic unit.
Cavalry equipment of the Roman army in the first century A.D.
TL;DR: The main aim of as mentioned in this paper is to identify and describe the elements that went together to make up Roman military horse harness in the first century A.D. and to generate new interest in cavalry equipment and provoke discussion about the functions of its various components.