Roman Propaganda: How Emperors Manufactured Consent

Imperial Image, Public Spectacle, and the Architecture of Authority in Ancient Rome

Roman Propaganda: How Emperors Manufactured Consent
NEU
Roman emperors did not rule by force alone. From Augustus to Constantine, the most enduring reigns were built on carefully constructed public identities — communicated through coinage, monumental architecture, public games, religious ceremony, and state-controlled historiography. The Roman imperial system was, among other things, a sophisticated apparatus for shaping how millions of people understood power, legitimacy, and their own place within it. This book examines how successive emperors manufactured consent across a multilingual, multiethnic empire stretching from Britain to Mesopotamia. Drawing on numismatic evidence, epigraphic records, archaeological surveys of... alles anzeigen expand_more

Roman emperors did not rule by force alone. From Augustus to Constantine, the most enduring reigns were built on carefully constructed public identities — communicated through coinage, monumental architecture, public games, religious ceremony, and state-controlled historiography. The Roman imperial system was, among other things, a sophisticated apparatus for shaping how millions of people understood power, legitimacy, and their own place within it.



This book examines how successive emperors manufactured consent across a multilingual, multiethnic empire stretching from Britain to Mesopotamia. Drawing on numismatic evidence, epigraphic records, archaeological surveys of public monuments, and literary sources including Virgil, Livy, and imperial biographers, it traces the specific tools and strategies emperors deployed to project authority, neutralize opposition, and embed loyalty into the fabric of daily Roman life.



The narrative moves beyond individual rulers to examine the institutional machinery of imperial image-making: the role of the Senate in ratifying propaganda narratives, the use of triumphal processions and gladiatorial games as instruments of political communication, and the ways subject populations interpreted, appropriated, or quietly subverted the messages directed at them.



Without reducing ancient Rome to a mirror of the present, the book invites readers to recognize in Roman imperial communication the structural foundations of techniques that have never disappeared from political life.



Author of English-language books on personal growth, business strategy, and historical insights. With a focus on practical wisdom from the past and present, Alex helps readers unlock their potential through transformative ideas.

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  • SW9783565324552110164

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  • Artikelnummer SW9783565324552110164
  • Autor find_in_page Alex Linden
  • Autoreninformationen Author of English-language books on personal growth, business… open_in_new Mehr erfahren
  • Verlag find_in_page epubli
  • Seitenzahl 145
  • Veröffentlichung 14.03.2026
  • Barrierefreiheit
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  • ISBN 9783565324552

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