חזרה לתוצאות החיפוש

State power in ancient China and Rome

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Two thousand years ago, the Qin/Han and Roman empires were the largest political entities of the ancient world, developing simultaneously yet independently at opposite ends of Eurasia. Although their territories constituted only a small percentage of the global land mass, these two Eurasian polities controlled up to half of the world population and endured longer than most pre-modern imperial states. Similarly, their eventual collapse occurred during the same time. The parallel nature of the Qin/Han and Roman empires has rarely been studied comparatively. Yet here is a collection of pioneering

כותר State power in ancient China and Rome / edited by Walter Scheidel.
מהדורה 1st ed.
מוציא לאור New York, New York : Oxford University Press
שנה [2015]
הערות Description based upon print version of record.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
English
הערת תוכן ותקציר Cover
State Power in Ancient China and Rome
Copyright
Acknowledgments
Contents
Contributors
Chronology
China
Rome
STATE POWER IN ANCIENT CHINA AND ROME
Introduction
1: Kingship and Elite Formation
1. Patrimonial Politics of Complex Agrarian Empires
2. Imperial Elite Formation and the Domestication of Aristocracy
3. Dialogue and Negotiation: The Ecumenic Discourse on Kingship
4. Final Reflections
2: Toward a Comparative Understanding of the Executive Decision-Making Process in China and Rome
3: The Han Bureaucracy: Its Origin, Nature, and Development
1. The Origin of Bureaucracy in China2. The Structure of the Western Han Bureaucracy
3. Ranking, Recruitment, Promotion, and Performance Checking
3.1. Ranking
3.2. Recruitment and Promotion
3.3 Performance Checking
4. The Making of a Prevailing Ideology
5. Problems of the Western Han Bureaucracy
5.1. The Emperor and the Bureaucracy
5.2. The Recommendation System
5.3. The Censorial System and Flexibility of the Chinese Bureaucracy
5.4. The "Problems" of the Clerks
6. Bureaucracy and Modernity
4: The Common Denominator: Late Roman Imperial Bureaucracy from a Comparative Perspective
1. Methodological Premises: Une histoire à naître? Bureaucracy as a Topic of Research2. The Origins of Roman Protobureaucratic Administration and Its Ultimate Purpose
3. Egypt
4. Questions of Scale
5. Transformations in the Fourth and Early Fifth Centuries
6. Late Roman Bureaucracy: Structures, Official Expectations, and Praxis
7. Principal-Agent Relationships in the Late Roman Administration
8. Spiritual Guidelines
9. Macro Convergences, Micro Differences, and the Importance of the Meso Level
5: State Revenue and Expenditure in the Han and Roman Empires
1. Skeletons of Empire
2. Han Revenue3. Roman Revenue
4. Distributional Comparisons
4.1. Sources of Revenue
4.2. Agency Costs
4.3. Protection Costs
4.4. Overall State Expenditure
5. Outcomes
6: Urban Systems in the Han and Roman Empires: State Power and Social Control
1. Capital Cities
2. "Artificial" Cities
3. Urban-Based Administration
7: Public Spaces in Cities in the Roman and Han Empires
1. Introduction
2. Cities and Their Public Buildings
3. Public Spaces and Their Builders
4. Cities and Their Past
5. Conclusion
8: Ghosts, Gods, and the Coming Apocalypse: Empire and Religion in Early China and Ancient Rome1. Comparative Empires: Paired Sovereigns, Human and Divine Emperors, and Millenarian Movements
2. The Domestication of the Ghosts: Deceased Humans, Spirits, and Ancestors in Early Chinese Religious Practice
3. Religion and Politics in Bronze Age China
4. The Warring States Period
5. Rejecting the Religious Practices
5.1. The Mohists
5.2. Self-Divinization Movements
5.3. State Centralization
6. Qin and Early Han
7. The Human Mediator of the World
8. The Revelations of the Gods
8.1. The Taiping Jing
סדרה Oxford studies in early empires
היקף החומר 1 online resource (322 p.)
שפה אנגלית
שנת זכויות יוצרים ©2015
מספר מערכת 997010711938705171
תצוגת MARC

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