
State Power in Ancient China and Rome
Walter Scheidel(Editor)
Oxford University Press Inc
Published on 15. January 2015
Book
Hardback
324 pages
978-0-19-020224-8 (ISBN)
Description
The Chinese and the Romans created the largest empires of the ancient world. Separated by thousands of miles of steppe, mountains and sea, these powerful states developed independently and with very limited awareness of each other's existence. This parallel process of state formation served as a massive natural experiment in social evolution that provides unique insight into the complexities of historical causation. Comparisons between the two empires shed new light on the factors that led to particular outcomes and help us understand similarities and differences in ancient state formation. The explicitly comparative perspective adopted in this volume opens up a dialogue between scholars from different areas of specialization, encouraging them to address big questions about the nature of imperial rule. In a series of interlocking case studies, leading experts of early China and the ancient Mediterranean explore the relationship between rulers and elite groups, the organization and funding of government, and the ways in which urban development reflected the interplay between state power and communal civic institutions. Bureaucratization, famously associated with Qin and Han China but long less prominent in the Roman world, receives special attention as an index of the ambitions and capabilities of kings and emperors. The volume concludes with a look at the preconditions for the emergence of divine rulership. Taken together, these pioneering contributions lay the foundations for a systematic comparative history of early empires.
Reviews / Votes
To close, this is a fascinating and persuasive depiction of two of the most important empires of the ancient world. In providing such a detailed analysis of both, this book allows not just for an implicit defence of comparative history but demands that we as scholars ask new questions about familiar topics and subjects. The different approaches to comparative history here, by scholars writing together, or leaning is important, but so too is the wider concern, that the language and practice of empire must be reclaimed by historians. * Anthony Smart, York St John University, De novis libris iudicia *More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
New York
United States
Target group
College/higher education
Professional and scholarly
Illustrations
5 figures and 2 maps
Dimensions
Height: 240 mm
Width: 161 mm
Thickness: 24 mm
Weight
708 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-19-020224-8 (9780190202248)
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Schweitzer Classification
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Walter Scheidel
State Power in Ancient China and Rome
Book
03/2021
Oxford University Press Inc
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Walter Scheidel
State Power in Ancient China and Rome
E-Book
12/2014
1st Edition
OUP eBook
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Person
Walter Scheidel is Dickason Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics and History at Stanford University. He is the author, editor, or co-editor of fourteen books, including Rome and China and The Oxford Handbook of the State in the Ancient Near East and Mediterranean.
Editor
Dickason Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics and HistoryDickason Professor in the Humanities and Professor of Classics and History, Stanford University
Content
Contributors ; Chronology ; Maps ; Introduction ; Walter Scheidel ; 1 Kingship and elite formation ; Peter Fibiger Bang and Karen Turner ; 2 Toward a comparative understanding of the executive decision-making process in China and Rome ; Corey Brennan ; 3 The Han bureaucracy: its origin, structure and development ; Dingxin Zhao ; 4 The common denominator: late Roman imperial bureaucracy from a comparative perspective ; Peter Eich ; 5 State revenue and expenditure in the Han and Roman empires ; Walter Scheidel ; 6 Urban systems in the Han and Roman empires: state power and social control ; Carlos Norena ; 7 Public spaces in cities in the Roman and Han empires ; Mark Lewis ; 8 Ghosts, gods, and the coming apocalypse: empire and religion in early China and ancient Rome ; Michael Puett ; Bibliography ; Index