The Role of the Army in the Government of the Roman Near East, 64 BC-AD 285

State Building and Provincial Development

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This study brings together a wide range of sources and perspectives in order to understand the basis of Roman rule in the Near East between 64 BC and AD 285. It provides a model for understanding how Roman frontiers and provinces worked and challenges preconceptions about how provinces were governed. It argues that the military orientation of the provinces meant that the army, and its personnel, were the main agents in developing the provinces and carrying out provincial-level administration throughout the Principate. The book tackles the main questions in Roman historiography concerning frontiers, and the nature of provinces, and grounds its arguments in the best available source material from the Near East and the latest archaeological research. In particular, it utilises the testimony of soldiers and provincials themselves (such as that found in the papyri from Dura-Europos) and offers a fresh perspective on the evidence.

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Gary Thomas Watson, Ph.D. (2024), Durham University, is an independent scholar and researcher. His research mainly focuses on Roman imperial, military and political history. He has contributed to several international conferences and continues to publish research on these topics. He has also worked at the British School at Athens on a project intended to provide access to classics and ancient history for underprivileged students in the UK. He currently works on the documentation and digitisation of inscriptions from Dura for IDEA (the International Dura-Europos Archive).
Acknowledgements
List of Figures and Maps
Abbreviations
  Introduction
 1 The Interrelationship between the Military and Civil Spheres
 2 The Building Blocks of Empire: Provinciae
 3 The Establishment of the Near Eastern Provinces
 4 The Grand Debate of the Roman Empire: Frontiers
 5 Roman Imperial ‘Administration’ and ‘Provincial Government’

Part 1 Building the Provinces
  Introduction to Part 1
 The Establishment of Military Networks, Stations and Centres to Secure, Administer and Demarcate Provincial Territory

1 Roman Networks
 Roads and Infrastructure as a Means to Occupation and Governance
 1.1 Syria: a Network for the Expansion of Occupied Territory
 1.2 Judaea: a Network for Conquest and Suppression
 1.3 Arabia: a Network for Remote Access
 1.4 Mesopotamia and Osrhoene: a Network for a Frontier?
 1.5 A Roman Network: the Establishment of a Provincial Infrastructure in the Near East

2 Roman Stations
 Garrisons and Fortified Structures as Provincial-Administrative Space
 2.1 Dura and Palmyra as Paradigms
 2.2 From Station to Roman Station

3 Roman Centres
 The Legions and Their castra as the Basis for Provincial Government
 3.1 Centring In on the Bridgehead: the Pre-Flavian Centres
 3.2 Raphanaea and the Legio III Gallica
 3.3 Zeugma and the Legio IV Scythica
 3.4 Samosata and the Legio XVI Flavia Firma
 3.5 Bostra and the Legio III Cyrenaica
 3.6 Jerusalem/Aelia Capitolina and the Legio X Fretensis
 3.7 Legio-Caparcotna and the Legio VI Ferrata
 3.8 Singara, Nisibis and the Legiones Parthica
 3.9 City Centres: the castra of the Near East as Administrative Spaces

Part 2 Governing the Provinces
  Introduction to Part 2
 The Emergence of ‘Administration’ from Military Occupation

4 From Pacification to Policing
 The Soldiers as Custodians of Empire
 4.1 The Early Years: Policing a Hegemonic Empire
 4.2 The High Period of Empire: the Evolution of a Provincial (Military) Police Force
 4.3 Tax Collection as Part of the Policing Function
 4.4 Custodians of Empire: Paramilitary or Just Military?

5 The Command of a Province
 Governors, Commanders and Provincial Government
 5.1 The Foundation for Governance: Gabinius, Syria’s First ‘Governor’?
 5.2 The Governors as Commanders
 5.3 The Governors as Administrators
 5.4 Stand-In Administrators?

6 Military Officers
 From Warfare to Administration
 6.1 The Evolution of Administrative Functions: Military Officers as Delegate Officials
 6.2 An Evolving Military Occupation: District Governors?
 6.3 Roman Districts for District Commanders?
 6.4 The Roman Army and the Realisation of Provincial Government in the Near East
Appendix 1: Auxiliary Units of the Near East
 Syria
 Judaea/Syria Palaestina
 Arabia
 Estimated Numbers
Appendix 2: Auxiliary Bases
 Stations and Potential Stations in Town and Cities
 Stations and Potential Stations in Forts
 Forts without Attested Auxiliary Units or Garrisons
Bibliography
Index of Places
Index of Legions
This book will be of interest to institutions, libraries and researchers that specialise in the study of Roman frontiers, the Roman military and provinces, or the study of the Near-East.
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