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Harold Mattingly

Author of The Man in the Roman Street

39+ Works 444 Members 2 Reviews

About the Author

Harold B. Mattingly has been a lecturer and reader in Ancient History at Nottingham University, and Professor of Ancient History at Leeds University.

Series

Works by Harold Mattingly

The Man in the Roman Street (1966) 73 copies
Roman Imperial Civilisation (1957) 68 copies, 1 review
Fel. Temp. Reparatio (1977) 2 copies

Associated Works

Agricola and Germania (0098) — Translator, some editions — 2,324 copies, 19 reviews
Agricola (1967) — Translator, some editions — 236 copies, 2 reviews
Barlaam and Ioasaph (Loeb Classical Library) (1914) — Translator, some editions — 132 copies, 3 reviews
The Conversion of Constantine and Pagan Rome (1969) — Translator, some editions — 33 copies
Essays on Roman Culture: The Todd Memorial Lectures (1974) — Contributor — 12 copies
A history of Roman religion (1956) — Translator, some editions — 10 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Members

Reviews

2 reviews
while often dry and text book like this work offers interesting angles on the Roman empire from Augustus to the final collapse of this empire in the west. the author has expertise in coins and brings in numismatic clues accompanied by many plates. the author brings in much detail on slow decline of paganism and the furtive rise of Christianity tied to imperial decline and collapse. for paganism the final resurgent echoes in Mithras, Isis and Sol were interesting. for Christianity was the show more phrase atheism applied to them the inherent acceptance and inclusivity of polytheism versus the antagonistic monotheism of the Christians.

One thing that jumped out to me is Roman soldiers in the field complaining of being served meat when they could not get their pulse (edible legumes) porridge with veggies. Maybe in an era before refrigeration that was a sensible response, though it struck me as sad like the prisoners complaining of being server lobster multiple times a week in The Big Oyster: History on the Half Shell.
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This is the second volume of the classic RIC. This work is the standard reference for roman imperial coins, it is extremely comprehensive and detailed. An excellent and valuable book.

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Statistics

Works
39
Also by
12
Members
444
Popularity
#55,178
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
2
ISBNs
44

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