The Julio-Claudians and the Herods explores two of the most influential dynasties of the early Roman Empire. Rather than treating the Herods simply as client rulers or focusing solely on their interactions with Rome, this book examines each dynasty on its own terms?its political strategies, ideological claims, public imagery, and methods of shaping legitimacy.
The study then considers the points of contact between the two houses: where their interests aligned, where their narratives overlapped, and how their respective uses of power and propaganda occasionally intersected in the wider context of the Roman East. Drawing on literary evidence, archaeology, and numismatics, the book situates both dynasties within the broader imperial system without reducing one to a function of the other.
This is a work about two parallel centers of power, each constructing its own identity, authority, and public meaning in a rapidly changing imperial world?sometimes independently, sometimes in dialogue, always with significant impact on the political landscape of the early Roman East.
Note: This volume includes the full texts of two previously published essays?"Gaius Caligula's Reign, Personality and Friendship with M. Julius Agrippa I" and "The Malhata Fortress on the Roman-Judaean Negev Frontier." Readers who purchase this book do not need to obtain those separate publications, as their complete content appears here as chapters.