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Risk in the Roman World

Risk in the Roman World

Risk in the Roman World

Jerry Toner, Churchill College, Cambridge
November 2023
Available
Paperback
9781108723213

    Modern risk studies have viewed the inhabitants of the ancient world as being both dominated by fate and exposed to fewer risks, but this very readable and groundbreaking new book challenges these views. It shows that the Romans inhabited a world full of danger and also that they not only understood uncertainty but employed a variety of ways to help to affect future outcomes. The first section focuses on the range of cultural attitudes and traditional practices that served to help control risk, particularly among the non-elite population. The book also examines the increasingly sophisticated areas of expertise, such as the law, logistics and maritime loans, which served to limit uncertainty in a systematic manner. Religious expertise in the form of dream interpretation and oracles also developed new ways of dealing with the future and the implicit biases of these sources can reveal much about ancient attitudes to risk.

    • Argues for a cultural definition of Risk instead of a purely numerical approach
    • Shows how Romans deployed a range of strategies to understand and limit risk
    • Proposes new understandings of various Roman practices, such as interest rates, divination and the use of the law to deal with risk

    Reviews & endorsements

    'This is a highly readable, superbly documented survey of the ancient Roman cultural encounter with risk and uncertainty. J. S. Louzonis, CHOICE

    '[The book] is topical, mostly jargon-free, informed by relevant scholarship, and aimed primarily at university students and teachers of Classics and Ancient History. It is most successful at providing a gateway to an impressive variety of recent work by ancient historians bearing directly or indirectly on risk, and to a lesser extent to pertinent evidence from the sources. … thought-provoking and useful.' Kevin Uhalde, Bryn Mawr Classical Review

    See more reviews

    Product details

    November 2023
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781316997345
    0 pages
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Acknowledgements
    • 1. Risk and uncertainty
    • 2. A world full of risks
    • 3. A risk culture
    • 4. Risk management
    • 5. Moral hazards: constructing risk
    • 6. Conclusion
    • Bibliography
    • Index.
      Author
    • Jerry Toner , Churchill College, Cambridge

      JERRY TONER is a Fellow, Tutor and Director of Studies in Classics at Churchill College, Cambridge. He is a cultural historian whose work has a focus on history 'from below'. His book, Popular Culture in Ancient Rome (2009), analyses the life of the non-elite in Roman society. He has also written on Roman leisure and the Games, including The Day Commodus Killed a Rhino: Understanding the Roman Games (2014). He is interested in the use of Classics to create imagery and stereotypes relating to subordinate groups, a theme explored in Homer's Turk: How Classics Shaped Ideas of the East (2013). Other areas of research interest include the sensory history of Rome and mental health in Antiquity. He came to the idea of risk from looking at how ordinary people developed coping strategies but also from his study of ancient disasters (Roman Disasters, 2013). There have been over thirty translations of his books into sixteen languages.