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Mar 3, 2021 · This chapter explores some of the myriad dimensions of the relationship between religion and empire with particular focus on the empires of the Islamic world, while also alluding to their predecessors, neighbors, and rivals: Sasanian Persia, the Byzantine Empire, Latin Christendom, and finally the European colonial empires which moved into the same geographic space in the nineteenth and ...
- Prolegomena
Half a century has passed since V. S. Naipaul penned these...
- List of Figures, Tables and Maps
List of Figures, Tables and Maps - Empire and Religion | The...
- Law, Bureaucracy, and The Practice of Government and Rule
Beginning with the complex example of Haile Selassie I and...
- Empire and Military Organization
The history of empire is the history of organized violence....
- Oxford Academic
Oxford Academic - Empire and Religion | The Oxford World...
- Empires and The Politics of Difference
Differential incorporation into the social fabric of empire...
- Prolegomena
A modern example of an empire is the United States. ... Diversity-Empires are made up of different ethnicities, nationalities, cultures, religions, and races.
May 21, 2008 · Such sentiments, as Strong argues, mean that one has to be cautious in accepting too readily the view that the eighteenth-century British Empire was quite secular in character. 19 Thus he takes issue, for example, with the view expressed by Schlenther in his chapter on religion in the eighteenth-century volume of the Oxford history that “Great Britain's eighteenth-century Empire was driven ...
- John Gascoigne
- 2008
Imperialism in ancient times is clear in the history of China and in the history of western Asia and the Mediterranean—an unending succession of empires. The tyrannical empire of the Assyrians was replaced (6th–4th century bce) by that of the Persians, in strong contrast to the Assyrian in its liberal treatment of subjected peoples, assuring it long duration.
- The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
- What Is An Empire?
- Empires & Control
- CORE & Periphery
At its core, an empire is the domination of one state by another. This idea lies at the heart of the common use of the term 'empire' and is as old as state-building itself. The earliest city-states tried to grow by taking over their neighbours. Where they succeeded, a single larger state might form, but more often the aggressor became a core state ...
An empire is an unequal relationship between a core state and a periphery of one or more states controlled from the core. On the simplest level, control means military occupation or other formal political intervention, but it can also cover informal economic or cultural influence. Economic pressure by itself has frequently been enough to manipulate...
To explain how empires, thus defined, have risen, persisted and fallen over the millennia, the core, the periphery and the international situation each need to be examined. The core state is the place to look to find various motives for expansion, from the dream of imposing an imperial peace on squabbling states to the desire for economic exploitat...
Jul 10, 2023 · Religious belief and practice were enmeshed in Roman daily life. The presence of the divine suffused the physical world, and Romans sacrificed to their many gods as a way to gain their favor. Roman religion was multifaceted and based initially on the Greek pantheon, adapted for Rome’s culture and language.
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Jan 15, 2019 · General Overviews. While very few studies deal with the topic of religion and colonization in a holistic or comprehensive perspective (Muldoon 2004), more recent research has emphasized the role of religion and theology in Atlantic colonization schemes and imperial politics at large, be it for the British Empire (Armitage 2000; Noll, et al. 1994; Pestana 2009), the Spanish (González and ...