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The Praetorian Guard
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Table of Contents

Introduction: Jan Nederveen Pieterse and Habibul Haque Khondker Views from Dubai: Oriental Globalization Revisited. Jan Nederveen Pieterse Three Phases of Globalization: The Significance of Dubai's Emergence as a Trading Hub. Roger Ballard The Rise of Dubai: A Social History of the Commercial Cities in the Gulf. Aqil Kazim Abu Dhabi's Global Economy: Integration and Innovation. Christopher Davidson Are Today's Globalized Cathedrals of Consumption Tomorrow's Global Dinosaurs? George Ritzer The Arab World, the Global Moment and the Struggle over Representation. Lena Jayyusi Mainstreaming Islam: Taking Charge of the Faith. Dale Eickelman Wanted but not Welcome: Social Determinants of Labor Migration in the UAE. Habibul Haque Khondker Negotiating Migrant Status in the Emerging Global City: Britons in Dubai. Katie Walsh

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Conceived as a personal army for the emperor, the elite Praetorian Guard soon took over a wide range of powers in Rome, and thus from the very beginning made a much greater impact on the city's life than just as an imperial bodyguard.

About the Author

Sandra Bingham is a Teaching Fellow in Classics at the University of Edinburgh. Her publications include several articles on the reigns of Septimius Severus and his son Caracalla, and a co-authored book on the rediscovery of Carthage for the Duckworth Archaeological Histories series.

Reviews

Sandra Bingham explores the idea that the Praetorians were much more than the emperor's bodyguard. They had a role in maintaining state security, policing large gatherings, fire-fighting, arresting and sometimes executing suspects, and occasionally even spying for the emperor. And by the second century AD they had developed a battlefield role since part of the guard usually accompanied the emperor on campaign. As the Praetorians were stationed in Rome close to the emperor and under the control of his right-hand man, the Praetorian prefect, they were inevitably drawn into the political intrigue and power struggles of the imperial court. Bingham's fast-paced though carefully constructed narrative, backed up by sound analysis of crucial issues, expertly conveys the reader though this blood-thirsty and exciting tale, which highlights important issues in the wider history of the Roman world. Detailed notes make the book a valuable tool for students and scholars, while general readers will welcome its crisp and clear style and eye for intriguing details of life in the guard.-Brian Campbell, Professor of Roman History, Queen's University, Belfast'Sandra Bingham's book is a much-needed and valuable history of the Praetorian Guard from its origins to its disbandment by the emperor Constantine the Great in AD 312. It covers the history, organization, and duties of the Guard, with full notes and bibliography. There is no full-length treatment of the Praetorian Guard in English, so this book will be greatly appreciated by classical historians, Roman military historians, and students of Roman history. Clear and concise in style, supported by ancient and current secondary sources, Bingham's study is balanced in its treatment of an often partisan subject.' -Sara Elise Phang, author of Roman Military Service: Ideologies of Discipline in the Late Republic and Early Principate 'Sandra Bingham's The Praetorian Guard considers how the Roman elite military unit shaped Roman history, protecting, counseling, removing and replacing various emperors. Bingham neatly explains the history of the Guard, detailing the forerunners of the unit in republican Rome, such as the private cohorts of Sulla, Marius, Catiline, and even Cicero himself. She considers the status of the Guard in Roman society, where and how it was physically stationed in the city, as well as the unit's internal organization, offering also salient comments about the Guard as a fighting unit. Bingham's copious notes do not slow down the narrative but allow the studious reader to pursue sundry points in fuller detail. All in all, a valuable contribution to Roman history generally and specifically to Roman imperial rule, the household of the emperor, and the person of the emperor himself.' - R Alden Smith, Professor of Classics, Baylor University 'Sandra Bingham's new book is an attractively written assessment of a military force which was central to political events at Rome, providing close protection for the emperor and his family, and accompanying him in his campaigns on the frontiers. The author's compelling narrative brings before us the officers and soldiers on duty at the imperial palace and in their fortified encampment on the outskirts of the city. This is a most welcome evocation of the Praetorians and their world that will appeal to specialists and general readers alike.' - Lawrence Keppie, Emeritus Professor of Roman History and Archaeology, University of Glasgow

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