Embedded Histories: Belonging in the Maghreb from 1st C BCE - 4th C CE
Danielle’s project looks at material culture and textual sources to explore how North Africans responded to Roman power during the Late Republic and Imperial periods. By investigating phenomena such as religion, social structures, and naming customs she argues for a nuanced understanding of Roman-North African relations during this period and a reimagining of the traditional narrative around provincial assimilation into Roman society. This dissertation also takes seriously North African identity as separate from, though undoubtedly influenced by, Roman imperialism and thus engages with Punic-language sources from the region as well as any relevant Greek or Latin evidence. Ultimately, North Africa served as a landscape of colonialism and the people who lived there developed their own techniques for preserving their local cultures while being subjects of an empire.
The Elite Networks of the Seleucid Empire
In previous studies, the Seleucid Empire has been investigated through the perspectives of either the royal dynasty or the local communities under its control. However, in this dissertation, I argue that an alternative approach exists. Instead of focusing on the royal dynasty or local communities, I investigate the Seleucid Empire through the perspective of the imperial elites who inhabited the royal courts, served as garrison commanders, and managed estates. The imperial elites performing various roles formed an extensive network that spanned the length of the Seleucid Empire. This dissertation, by avoiding a top-down perspective, explores how the imperial elites interacted with members of the royal dynasty, other elites in the network, and the many different types of communities that they exercised influence over. I argue that such interactions had a wide range of outcomes for the imperial elites who attempted to acquire and maintain their social capital by various means within this competitive space. This dissertation relies upon a wide range of archaeological, epigraphic, numismatic, and literary sources. Each category of evidence offers a different perspective on the activities and behaviors of the imperial elites across the expanse of the Seleucid Empire.
Private Wealth and Public Finance in the Hellenistic Polis
Peter's dissertation is concerned with the financial relationships between individuals and cities in the Hellenistic Greek world, especially as they were enacted through taxes, liturgies, loans, gifts, subscriptions, and foundations. In much scholarship, the intersections of private wealth and public finance in ancient Greece are studied in relation to either taxation or euergetism. These two paradigms are often contradictory—the former defined by compulsion and requirement, the latter by voluntarity and reward—and yet they also lay claim to some of the same financial phenomena. Liturgies and subscriptions, for instance, can be claimed for either category but also strain their respective definitions. Therefore, the goal of this project is to set these intersections of private wealth and public finance on an equal footing, situating them on a spectrum with various degrees of constraint and reward. This approach is founded on the common function of all these financial arrangements—the deployment of private wealth by or for the polis—and, as a result, highlights that taxes, liturgies, loans, gifts, subscriptions, and foundations may be seen, from the city's perspective, as alternative means to the same end. Through case studies of several well-documented Hellenistic sites, it is possible to demonstrate that these various economic arrangements between individuals and poleis were indeed used side by side and to examine when and why different cities sought to draw on private wealth in these various ways.