Rome enters the Greek East from anarchy to hierarchy in the Hellenistic Mediterranean, 230-170 BC

This volume examines the period from Rome's earliest involvement in the eastern Mediterranean to the establishment of Roman geopolitical dominance over all the Greek states from the Adriatic Sea to Syria by the 180s BC.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Eckstein, Arthur M.
Format: Book
Language:English
Published: Chichester, UK Wiley-Blackwell 2012
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Table of Contents:
  • Rome in contact with the Greek East, 230-205 BC
  • Roman expansion and the pressures of anarchy
  • Rome and Illyria, ca. 230-217 BC
  • Rome, the Greek states, and Macedon, 217-205 BC
  • The power-transition crisis in the Greek Mediterranean, 207-200 BC
  • The pact between the kings and the crisis in the eastern Mediterranean state-system, 207-200 BC
  • Reaction : diplomatic revolution in the Mediterranean, 203/202-200 BC
  • Diplomatic revolution in the Mediterranean, II : the Roman decision to intervene, 201/200 BC
  • From hegemonic war to hierarchy, 200-170 BC
  • Hegemonic war, I : Rome and Macedon, 200-196 BC
  • Hegemonic war, II : Rome and Antiochus the Great, 200-188 BC
  • Hierarchy and unipolarity, ca. 188-170 BC.