Academic literature on the topic 'Administration – Provinces romaines'
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Journal articles on the topic "Administration – Provinces romaines"
Rousset, Denis. "La cité et son territoire dans la province d’Achaïe et la notion de « Grèce romaine »." Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales 59, no. 2 (April 2004): 363–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0395264900003851.
Full textFrance, Jérôme. "Les personnels et la gestion des entrepôts impériaux dans le monde romain." Revue des Études Anciennes 110, no. 2 (2008): 483–507. http://dx.doi.org/10.3406/rea.2008.6595.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Administration – Provinces romaines"
Mihailescu-Bîrliba, Lucretiu. "Les affranchis dans les provinces romaines d'Illyricum." Paris, EHESS, 2004. http://www.theses.fr/2004EHES0037.
Full textThis PhD Thesis contains a subject which has not been treated before in the historiography of Roman Antiquity. Our work was divided in two main parts : a synthesis about the freedmen in Illyricum and the epigraphical corpus. The synthetic chapters contain many subjects, such as the historiography about freedmen, the administration of Illyricum, the social and administrative role of freedmen in Illyricum, the social mobility, the private life and the religion of imperial and private freedmen. The corpus follows the alphabetical order of our subjects in every province. It contains the epigraphical texts, their translation and a commentary followed by bibliographical references
Deborde, Gwenaëlle. "Ex Decreto. L'administration judiciaire des communautés occidentales sous le Haut-Empire romain." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Sorbonne université, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024SORUL103.
Full textIn order to comprehend justice in the Western provinces, we must shift our focus from Rome, its writers, and lawyers to local sources that provide information about cases and trials. In search of justice, the communities of the empire brought their complaints and disputes to the Roman authorities in order to assert and protect their rights. The epigraphy maintains a record of both the quarrels that animate them and their resolution at the provincial level. The transcription of original documents produced after the trials, which were largely destroyed over time, is a valuable resource for historians. What can epigraphic sources bring to our knowledge of these conflicts? How does Roman justice apply to the communities of the empire? What strategies do they employ to influence relationships with neighbors or have their rights recognized through the courts? This study depicts Roman justice as an empirical system that develops over time through litigation, creating a reality of practical and coherent solutions. The installation of Roman administrative systems in the provinces is not a linear history because it demonstrates many resistances and highlight a constant renegotiation of consensus between communities and the Roman authorities
Bérenger, Agnès. "Missions sénatoriales et administration de l'Empire : censiteurs et correcteurs d'Auguste à Sévère Alexandre (31 av. J.-C. - 235 ap. J.-C.)." Paris 1, 1997. http://www.theses.fr/1997PA010501.
Full textThe early empire (31 B. C. - 235 A. D) bears witness to the appearance of various extraordinary missions which were often confered on senators of praetorian or consular rank. This thesis attempts to trace the emergence and development of these missions. The first part of the thesis draws together the prosopographies of thirty censitores, twenty four correctores and twelve incerti. Presented in alphabetic order, these prosopographic studies analyse the particular career of each individual senator. They also attempt to define, in the light of the senators earlier posts, the reasons which might explain why they were selected for this particular mission. The second part of the thesis studies the missions specific powers and functions and their holders. After an investigation into the circumstances leading to the initial creation of the senatorial missions as such, their evolution is examined in order to better define their spatial and temporal structures. A third chapter is devoted to the special envoys as seen through their titles and carrers, and attempts to outline a specific profile. Finally, the missions methods are brought into focus through a study of their powers, the reports of their activities in the provinces and the reactions of the provincials
Chevrollier, François. "La province romaine de Crète-Cyrénaïque, de Pompée à Dioclétien. Histoire, administration, société." Thesis, Paris 4, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA040077.
Full textThe last twenty years or so have seen a dramatic increase in the interest on Roman Crete, while long-standing archaeological excavations in Cyrenaica (when they were still possible) brought to light lots of information on the Roman period. However, the administrative setting which the two areas lived in during the High Empire remains almost completely unknown because of the historians’ disinterest in this double province of the Roman Empire. Created by Pompey and still a reality during the Tetrarchy, the province of Crete and Cyrene is often thought as a marginal and unsuccessful administrative entity, far away from Rome. The thesis aims at re-evaluating the historical role of the province in the Roman Empire and at analyzing the way local societies reacted to the Roman domination. The first part focuses on the administrative history of the province. The chronology of its creation is studied along with the reasons why Rome chose the administrative solution of the union. The fasti of the Roman magistrates in charge of the province are established and the internal organization of the province is analyzed. In the second and third parts, the life and evolution of local societies under Roman domination are discussed through a prosopographical analysis. Portraying the senators originating from Crete and Cyrenaica as well as the archontes of the Hadrianic panhellenic league and the high priests of the imperial cult gives valuable information on how local elites reached the superior strata of Roman society. But most of the aristocrats were only active locally and never got beyond their own city-states. Several stemmata of local families help to understand how the Roman Empire change the way of representing themselves and alter their strategies of social domination
Fournier, Julien. "Entre tutelle romaine et autonomie civique : recherches sur l’administration judiciaire dans les provinces hellénisées de l’Empire romain (146 av. J.-C. – 212 apr. J.-C.)." Paris 4, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007PA040165.
Full textAt the centre of the investigation is the nature of Roman rule upon cities which possessed a long tradition of self-government and administration. Part I is a survey of judiciary structures in the provinces of Asia and Achaia. Part II deals with the division of judicial task between roman authorities and civic governments. Part III is concerned with the provincial litigants’ attitude towards a pyramidal system and the grounds of voluntary applications to Roman courts. Roman rule appears as a pragmatic one, which claims as a part of its sovereignty criminal jurisdiction and all cases related to Roman citizens, but otherwise concedes a large autonomy to local courts. Cities’ judiciary organization is largely inherited from the hellenistic period, although oligarchical institutions tend to supplant popular justice
Morabito, Stéphane. "La province romaine des Alpes Maritimes, des origines à la fin de l'Antiquité." Montpellier 3, 2007. http://www.theses.fr/2007MON30061.
Full textThis study attempts to resolve the questions relating to the origins of provincia Alpium Maritimarum, its creation and evolution in terms of the cities and the populations within it up to the late Antiquity. Provincial power, territorial borders and the limits of its cities, the judicial status of its communities, the onomastics of its populations, and an assessment of the auxiliary troupes stationed in its capital are researched in this paper. Furthermore, this thesis also examines the various themes relating to municipal life, and the channels of communication within the province. Nikaia, in the locality of Marseilles and often improperly included within the limits of Alpes Maritimae, is discussed here in depth. The author addresses the question of its location, the shape and form of municipal life within it, and the territory it occupied. This study is based primarily on epigraphic sources, which have been compiled and classified here by civitas. A further two chapters contain, for one, a listing of inscriptions discovered in the territory of Nikaia and, for the other, a record of the milestones observed within the limits of Alpes Maritimae. Each inscription is recorded and presented according to the standards of the discipline. Maps, photographs and manuscript extracts relating to and supporting the epigraphic evidence are also included in this paper, with the aim of providing as much documentation as possible to the academic community regarding the subject
Lamoine, Laurent. "Représentations et réalité du pouvoir local en Gaule romaine : substrat gaulois et modèle romain (IIe siècle avant J.-C. - IIIe siècle après J.-C.)." Clermont-Ferrand 2, 2003. https://hal.science/tel-04108234.
Full textTalbot, François. "Apprendre et enseigner en Afrique proconsulaire : l'éducation classique et la vie municipale africaine, du second siècle à la fin du monde antique." Thesis, Université Laval, 2007. http://www.theses.ulaval.ca/2007/24441/24441.pdf.
Full textMurray, Mark. "Cicéron proconsul : un gouverneur provincial en action." Master's thesis, Université Laval, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11794/29391.
Full textDell'oro, d'amico Federica. "Antonino Pio e la provincia d’Asia." Thesis, Paris 1, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017PA01H066.
Full textThis research concerns the figure of Antonius Pius and the dispositions which are directly taken accordingly to his auctoritas, in order to identify the Leitmotiv of his empire. The aim of this research is to highlight the imperial political choices and, through the analysis of mandata principum, rescripts, letters from the emperor to governors, testimonies and forms of correspondence, to identify the principles and guidelines of his politics. The monograph consists of four chapters. The first chapter is devoted to a historical excursus, which is useful to have a preliminary historical view of the province of Asia, with particular attention to the political and administrative aspects. The second chapter focuses the institutional aspects in the relationship between Antoninus Pius and the province of Asia, from a qualitative and quantitative perspective. The third chapter is dedicated to a prosopographical study of the administrative staff of the province of Asia, useful to define a framework of the political system, relations and interests within the members of the Senate and the imperial family. The fourth chapter is devoted to the study of the conventual system : the evidences highlight how Antonin, thanks to his experience as a proconsul in Asia, managed a better organization of the conventual system, probably increasing the number of the capitals
Books on the topic "Administration – Provinces romaines"
Bernard, Rémy. Les fastes sénatoriaux des provinces romaines d'Anatolie au Haut-Empire (31 av. J.-C.-284 ap. J.-C.): Pont-Bithynie, Galatie, Cappadoce, Lycie-Pamphylie et Cilicie. Paris: Editions Recherche sur les civilisations, 1988.
Find full textMartin, Jean-Pierre. Les provinces romaines d'Europe centrale et occidentale.: Norique, Rhétie, provinces alpestres, Gaules, Germanies, Bretagne et provinces hispaniques de 31 avant J.-C. à 235 après J.-C. Paris: SEDES, 1991.
Find full textE, Alcock Susan, ed. The Early Roman Empire in the East. Oxford, England: Oxbow Books, 1997.
Find full textKirbihler, François. Les gouverneurs et les provinciaux sous la République romaine. Rennes: Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2011.
Find full textNnang, Noël Christian-Berna Obiang. Les empereurs romains en Afrique du Nord: Les grandes réformes du IIe au IIIe siècle après J.-C. Paris: Harmattan, 2014.
Find full textLamoine, Laurent. Le pouvoir local en Gaule romaine. Clermont-Ferrand: Presses universitaires Blaise Pascal, 2009.
Find full textMoatti, Claude. Archives et partage de la terre dans le monde romain (IIe siècle avant-Ier siècle après J.-C.). Roma, Italie: Ecole française de Rome, 1993.
Find full textNnang, Noël Christian-Bernard Obiang. Les empereurs romains et les cités d'Afrique: Du IIème au IIIème siècle ap. J.-C. Paris: Harmattan, 2011.
Find full textFrançoise, Vallet, and Kazanski Michel, eds. L' armée romaine et les barbares: Du IIIe au VIIe siècle. Rouen: Association française d'archéologie mérovingienne, 1993.
Find full textNemeti, Sorin. Finding Arcobadara: Essay on the geography and administration of Roman Dacia. Cluj-Napoca, [Romania]: Mega Publishing House, 2014.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Administration – Provinces romaines"
"Naissance et évolution administrative de la Crète-Cyrénaïque." In Histoire de la province romaine de Crete-Cyrenaique, de Pompee a Diocletien, 25–82. Peeters Publishers, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/jj.20261335.6.
Full textRossignol, Benoît. "Entre le glaive et le stylet. Armée et administration des provinces dans l’Occident romain (197 av. J.-C.-192 ap. J.-C.)." In Rome et l’Occident, 77–106. Presses universitaires de Rennes, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.4000/books.pur.124536.
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