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Divine Institutions

Religions and Community in the Middle Roman Republic

Dan-el Padilla Peralta

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Princeton University Press img Link Publisher

Sachbuch / Vor- und Frühgeschichte, Antike

Beschreibung

How religious ritual united a growing and diversifying Roman Republic

Many narrative histories of Rome's transformation from an Italian city-state to a Mediterranean superpower focus on political and military conflicts as the primary agents of social change. Divine Institutions places religion at the heart of this transformation, showing how religious ritual and observance held the Roman Republic together during the fourth and third centuries BCE, a period when the Roman state significantly expanded and diversified.

Blending the latest advances in archaeology with innovative sociological and anthropological methods, Dan-el Padilla Peralta takes readers from the capitulation of Rome's neighbor and adversary Veii in 398 BCE to the end of the Second Punic War in 202 BCE, demonstrating how the Roman state was redefined through the twin pillars of temple construction and pilgrimage. He sheds light on how the proliferation of temples together with changes to Rome's calendar created new civic rhythms of festival celebration, and how pilgrimage to the city surged with the increase in the number and frequency of festivals attached to Rome's temple structures.

Divine Institutions overcomes many of the evidentiary hurdles that for so long have impeded research into this pivotal period in Rome's history. This book reconstructs the scale and social costs of these religious practices and reveals how religious observance emerged as an indispensable strategy for bringing Romans of many different backgrounds to the center, both physically and symbolically.

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Dan-el Padilla Peralta

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Schlagwörter

Procession, Scrutiny, Supplication, Warfare, Cursus honorum, Determination, Writing, Technology, Praetor, Asclepius, Roman Republic, Tinkerer, Principate, Aedile, Caere, Personhood, Imagines (work by Philostratus), Jupiter (mythology), Fasti, Roman Senate, Plebs, Periodization, Politics, Greeks, Epigraphy, Military service, Sibylline Books, First Punic War, Ludi, Rome, Archaic Greece, Roman Religion, Slavery, Walter Scheidel, Ancient history, Princeton University Press, Catchment area, Second Punic War, Hellenization, Anniversary, Year, Infrastructure, Narrative, Museo archeologico nazionale (Cagliari), Religious experience, Historiography, Iconography, Wealth, Vulci, Cato the Elder, Case study, Religion, Laborer, Roman temple, State formation, Bibliography, Roman Empire, Precedent, Livy, Plautus, Roman economy, De Agri Cultura, Hellenistic period, Late Antiquity, Roman magistrate, Servian Wall, Votive offering, Triadic closure, City-state, Calculation