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Title:
Emperor, prefects & kings : the Roman West, 395-565 / P.S. Barnwell.
Author:
Barnwell, P. S.
Publication Information:
Chapel Hill : University of North Carolina Press, 1992.
Call Number:
JC89 .B36 1992
Abstract:
P.S. Barnwell examines the development of imperial and royal government in the western part of the Roman Empire and in the early "barbarian" kingdoms that were established within its frontiers - the Visigothic, Burgundian, Frankish, and Vandal nations. Covering the fifth century - the period from the death of the Emperor Theodosius to the death of the Emperor Justinian - Barnwell's book demonstrates the extent to which barbarian government was influenced by its Roman predecessor. Earlier studies have argued implicitly that the fifth century witnessed the disintegration of an ordered Roman governmental system and its replacement by a series of disorganized "Germanic" administrations. Barnwell, by contrast, examines Roman government of the fifth-century western Empire on its own terms, and then analyzes the administrations of individual Barbarian kingdoms in relation to this fifth-century Roman background. He shows that the law and government of the Barbarian kingdoms were more deeply indebted to Roman institutions than most previous historians have realized.
Electronic Access:
Table of contents http://www.gbv.de/dms/bowker/toc/9780807820711.pdf
ISBN:
9780807820711

9780715624272
Physical Description:
vii, 248 pages : map ; 25 cm
General Note:
Spine title: Emperor, prefects, and kings.
Contents:
Part I: The Emperor and the Imperial Court -- The Sources -- The Emperor -- The Imperial Court -- Part II: Provincial Administration -- The 'Roman' System of Provincial Administration -- The Kingdom of the Visigoths, c. 418-568 -- The Kingdom of the Burgundians -- The Franks and Gaul in the Sixth Century -- The Vandals and Africa -- Part III: Italy under Odoacer and the Ostrogoths -- The Sources -- 'Barbarian' Kings in Italy, 476-552 -- The Royal Court -- Senators and Provincial Governors -- The Uariae of Cassiodorus.
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