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.
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.