Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Spes Rei Publicae: the hope of the State?
Part One
1: The Emperor in the Late Roman World
2: Gratian and Valentinian II: Setting the Precedent
3: Long-term Success and Failure
4: Adjusting the Imperial Image
Part Two: Honorius
5: An Accident of Power?
6: The Regime of Stilicho
7: The Interregnum and the Rise of Flavius Constantius
Part Three: Valentinian III
8: The Struggle for Power
9: The Regime of Aetius
10: Valentinian III: Child-turned-Adult Emperor?
Conclusion
Primary Sources
Bibliography
Index
Meaghan A. McEvoy is a research scholar at the British School in Rome, a research fellow in Byzantine Studies at Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collections in Washington DC, and since 2010 has held a British Academy Postdoctoral Fellowship at Corpus Christi College, Oxford.
McEvoy's monograph will be essential reading ... and represents a
major contribution to our understanding of one of the great
transitional periods in European and world history.
*David M. Gwynn, English Historical Review*
McEvoy has produced an impressive analysis that challenges
historians to re-evaluate child emperors and the role traditionally
assigned to them in destabilizing the western empire.
*Richard Flower, Early Medieval Europe*
McEvoy is to be congratulated on producing a fine, clearly-written
study which signifcantly advances our understanding of the exercise
of political power during an important phase of late Roman
history.
*A. D. Lee, Journal of Roman Studies*
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