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Full Description
This volume introduces the notion of "stranger-kingship" to the field of ancient history and evaluates its use as a new way of thinking about kingship as a political, social, and cultural phenomenon.
The chapters highlight the clear and widespread value of the "stranger-king" as a new approach for understanding patterns of political life across time and space in antiquity. The volume begins with theoretical discussions of the "stranger king" and explores how the theory can be mapped onto current thinking about kingship in both Greece and Rome. The chapters then show the multifaceted ways in which this theory can be applied, testing some of its core ideas through case studies that cover Hellenistic monarchy, Greek and Roman kings, the Ptolemies of Egypt, Late Antique Roman emperors, and Ostrogothic Italy and Visigothic Iberia. The volume demonstrates that stranger-kingship has much to offer studies of ancient kingship as a heuristic tool, providing avenues for future research.
Stranger-Kingship in Antiquity provides a fascinating cross-cultural study of "stranger kings", of interest to students and scholars in classical studies and the history of the ancient Mediterranean world.
Contents
1. Introduction (The Editors); 2. Strangers and Chameleons: On Hellenistic Kings (Benedikt Eckhardt); SECTION 1: Individuals; 3. Clearchus of Heraclea Pontica as Stranger-King: Power, Religion, and Tyranny on the Black Sea (Marcaline J. Boyd); 4. King, Emperor, or Princeps: Augustus as a Stranger-King in Early Imperial Rome? (Amber Gartrell); 5. The Accession of Marcian and his Marriage to Pulcheria viewed through the Stranger-King Paradigm (Henry Anderson); SECTION 2: Groups; 6. The Cypselids, Stranger-Kingship, and the Immanent Limits of Greek Political Thinking (Julius Guthrie); 7. Hecataeus, Manetho, and the Ptolemies as Stranger-Kings of Egypt (Marc Gehrmann); 8. Waiting for the Barbarians? The notion of the stranger-king among the Ostrogoths and Visigoths (Andrew T. Fear).