Navigation auf zora.uzh.ch

Search

ZORA (Zurich Open Repository and Archive)

Egypt's specificity and impact on Roman history

Speidel, Michael Alexander (2019). Egypt's specificity and impact on Roman history. In: Vandorpe, Katelijn. A companion to Greco-Roman and late antique Egypt. Hoboken, USA: Wiley Blackwell, 575-581.

Abstract

Historians have long ranked the Roman takeover of Ptolemaic Egypt both as a major and far-reaching event in contemporary geopolitical power relations and as a pivotal moment in Egyptian and Roman history and culture. At the same time, however, as a Roman province, they also considered the former Ptolemaic kingdom to have fundamentally differed from all other Roman provinces. The degree to which the Roman takeover of the Nile Valley entailed continuity or change is evidently an important factor when attempting to define the specificity of Egypt as a Roman province. On the whole, it appears that “the changes introduced by the Romans were at least as important as the continuities”. Egypt was the origin of many remarkable products and developments that swept through the Roman Empire, including the dissemination of popular deities like Isis and Sarapis and of romantic notions of a bucolic lifestyle set in Nilotic landscapes.

Additional indexing

Item Type:Book Section, refereed, original work
Communities & Collections:06 Faculty of Arts > Institute of History
Dewey Decimal Classification:900 History
Language:English
Date:March 2019
Deposited On:04 Jun 2021 14:06
Last Modified:14 Jun 2024 03:30
Publisher:Wiley Blackwell
ISBN:9781118428474
OA Status:Closed
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1002/9781118428429.ch37
Related URLs:https://uzb.swisscovery.slsp.ch/permalink/41SLSP_UZB/rloemb/alma990113703460205508 (Library Catalogue)
Full text not available from this repository.

Metadata Export

Statistics

Citations

Dimensions.ai Metrics

Altmetrics

Authors, Affiliations, Collaborations

Similar Publications