ABSTRACT

Cities in the ancient world relied on private generosity to provide many basic amenities, as well as expecting leading citizens to pay for 'bread and circuses' - free food and public entertainment. This collection of essays by leading scholars from the UK and USA explores the important phenomenon of benefaction and public patronage in Roman Italy.
Ranging from the late republican period to the later Roman Empire, the contributions cover a wide range of topics, including the impact of benefactions and benefactors on the urban development of Roman Italy, on cultural and economic activity, and on the changing role of games and festivals in Roman society. They also explore the relationship between communities and their benefactors, whether these were local notables, senators, or the emperor himself, and examine how the nature of benefaction changed under the Empire.

chapter |11 pages

INTRODUCTION

Patronage and benefaction in ancient Italy

chapter 1|16 pages

THE PATRON AS BANKER

chapter 4|28 pages

Euergetism in its place: where was the amphitheatre in Augustan Rome? K AT HLEEN M . COLEMAN

Where was the amphitheatre in Augustan Rome?

chapter 6|20 pages

Imperial building at Rome: the role of Constantine E . D . HUNT

The role of Constantine

chapter 7|17 pages

FAVOR POPULI

Pagans, Christians and public entertainment in late Antique Italy