Fergus Millar is one of the most influential contemporary
historians of the ancient world. His essays and books, including
The Emperor in the Roman World and
The Roman Near
East, have enriched our understanding of the Greco-Roman world
in fundamental ways. In his writings Millar has made the
inhabitants of the Roman Empire central to our conception of how
the empire functioned. He also has shown how and why Rabbinic
Judaism, Christianity, and Islam evolved from within the wider
cultural context of the Greco-Roman world.
This is a three-volume collection of Fergus Millar's essays, which
transformed the study of the Roman Empire by shifting the focus of
inquiry onto the broader Mediterranean world and beyond.
Volume I: Opening this collection of sixteen essays is a new
contribution by Millar in which he defends the continuing
significance of the study of Classics and argues for expanding the
definition of what constitutes that field. In this volume he also
questions the dominant scholarly interpretation of politics in the
Roman Republic, arguing that the Roman people, not the Senate, were
the sovereign power in Republican Rome. In so doing he sheds new
light on the establishment of a new regime by the first Roman
emperor, Caesar Augustus.
Volume II: This second volume of the three-volume collection of
Millar's published essays draws together twenty of his classic
pieces on the government, society, and culture of the Roman Empire
(some of them published in inaccessible journals). Every article in
Volume 2 addresses the themes of how the Roman Empire worked in
practice and what it was like to live under Roman rule. As in the
first volume of the collection, English translations of the
extended Greek and Latin passages in the original articles make
Millar's essays accessible to readers who do not read these
languages.
Volume III: The 18 essays presented here include Millar's classic
contributions to our understanding of the impact of Rome on the
peoples, cultures, and religions of the eastern Mediterranean, and
the extent to which Graeco-Roman culture acted as a vehicle for the
self-expression of the indigenous cultures. The volume also
includes an epilogue by Millar written to conclude the
collection.