Review by Choice Review
The use of scientific evidence is an important recent trend in Roman history. The Antonine Plague of 165--180 CE--the earliest documented pandemic in world history--would seem an ideal subject for such an approach. Such, however, has not been the case. Pox Romana is, in fact, the first full-scale study of the Antonine Plague to appear in English. Unlike previous scholarship, which focused on identifying the disease--probably an early form of small pox--and treated it as a major contributing factor in Rome's decline, Elliott (Indiana Univ.) contextualizes the plague, arguing that it was not a cause of Rome's decline but that it was instead the result of weaknesses inherent in the socioeconomic structure of Roman society. He tells this story in eight chapters divided into three sections that cover the preexisting conditions that made the plague possible, the plague itself and its socioeconomic and cultural effects, and the normalization of those effects in the Late Roman Empire. Readers will find in this remarkable book an important contribution to Roman imperial history and a vivid account of the harsh realities of life in an ancient mega city like Rome. Summing Up: Highly recommended. General readers through faculty. --Stanley M. Burstein, emeritus, California State University, Los Angeles
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Historian Elliott (Economic Theory and the Roman Monetary Economy) evaluates in this enlightening account the impact of the Antonine plague of 165 CE on the demise of the Pax Romana, a period of relative stability in the Roman Empire from 27 BCE to 180 CE. Elliott contends that the empire was actually fragile during the Pax, and that the extreme impact of the plague was a symptom of this fragility. Throughout the period, he explains, the empire was rife with urban overpopulation, rampant poverty, poor sanitation, endemic disease (especially malaria), foreign conflict, and civil unrest. These social issues, as well as a series of natural disasters (including flooding of the River Tiber, drought, and agricultural failure in Egypt) prior to the plague intensified its effects. Moreover, the interconnectedness of the empire served as a vector: Roman soldiers returned from fighting in Persia with the plague in tow, while migration and inter-regional trade within the empire further spread the contagion. The plague's devastating consequences included food and supply shortages, economic crises, and political unrest. These effects, paired with the disease, are what eventually exhausted the brittle empire and ended the Pax, according to Elliott. Challenged by the meager documentation available, he expertly draws on trace evidence such as census records, real estate contracts, and paleoclimate research to make his case. It's an informative history that serves to encourage better pandemic preparedness today. (Feb.)
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