Skip to content

Near Eastern Royalty and Rome, 100-30 BC
Stock Photo: Cover May Be Different

Near Eastern Royalty and Rome, 100-30 BC Hardcover - 1990

by Richard D. Sullivan


From the publisher

During the first century BC, the Near and Middle Easy saw a great transition from the Seleucid and Ptolemaic Empires, by way of the brief Pontic and Armenian Empires, to the triumphant Parthian and Roman Empires. Richard D. Sullivan offers a guide to the central role of royalty during this period. He provides, through narrative and citations, a context for the frequent references to Eastern kings and queens by Caesar, Cicero, Strabo, Josephus, Tacitus, Appian, Dio, and others. He also discusses related inscriptions, coins, and papyri.

Sullivan focuses on the personnel of the many dynasties which rules the Near and Middle East, from Thrace through Asia Minor and the Levant to Egypt, then eastward to Armenia, Mesopotamia, and Parthia. He studies such famous figures as Mithradates Eupator, Cleopatra, and Herod the Great as well as others now obscure. To ?locate? them properly, he provides a narrative history of each dynasty and draws them together in a coherent account of Eastern royal governance and its accommodations with Rome and Parthia.

Details

  • Title Near Eastern Royalty and Rome, 100-30 BC
  • Author Richard D. Sullivan
  • Binding Hardcover
  • Edition First Edition
  • Pages 523
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher University of Toronto Press, Toronto
  • Date 1990
  • ISBN 9780802026828 / 0802026826
  • Weight 2.33 lbs (1.06 kg)
  • Dimensions 9.28 x 6.22 x 1.88 in (23.57 x 15.80 x 4.78 cm)
  • Library of Congress Catalog Number 90186281
  • Dewey Decimal Code 939.4