107,99 zł
Roman power depended as much on fear as on law. Behind the stability of the empire stood constant anxiety over revolt, sabotage, and the possibility that millions of enslaved workers might refuse obedience at once. Military force and legal control therefore became inseparable from everyday economic life. This account investigates how Roman authorities managed large populations of enslaved laborers through surveillance, punishment, and carefully structured dependency. Plantation estates, urban households, and mining operations all developed systems intended to prevent collective resistance before it emerged openly. Public executions, restricted movement, and military intervention functioned not only as discipline, but as political theater reinforcing elite dominance. The book also examines the legal complexity of slavery in Roman society. Manumission allowed selected individuals to acquire limited rights and economic participation, creating incentives for compliance while preserving broader hierarchies of ownership. Roman jurists treated human beings simultaneously as labor assets, legal property, and potential social threats requiring continuous regulation. Seen through rebellion and repression, imperial Rome appears less as a unified civilization than as a fragile order sustained by calculated inequality and permanent coercion.
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Liczba stron: 177
Rok wydania: 2026
