Roman Diplomacy

Date

2018-05-03

Authors

Burton, Paul

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

John Wiley and Sons Ltd

Abstract

In the main, Roman diplomacy (509 bce–14 ce) consisted of establishing treaties of peace (marking the end of wars), of alliance (in peacetime or during wars), and generals' agreements in the field (during wars); sending and receiving embassies (delegations of high‐ranking citizens) to air complaints and congratulations, establish alliances, declare war, investigate matters affecting Roman security interests, settle disputes, and demand satisfaction for (perceived) injuries; and offering and accepting interstate mediations of disputes and wars. Roman diplomatic vocabulary grew out of likely primitive practices overseen by priests, called fetiales, who oversaw foreign relations between Rome and other Italian states. The practice of deditio, the demand for absolute surrender by another state to Rome's complete discretion, probably had its roots in ancient Italian practice as well. In the historical period, Rome's international partnerships consisted of numerous informal amicitiae, “friendships,” and comparatively few formal treaties of alliance. Rome was often a willing broker of interstate mediations, but a less willing participant.

Description

Keywords

3500 BCE –1 CE, 1–999 CE, ancient diplomacy, ancient history, diplomacy and international relations, Roman history, Roman Republic

Citation

Source

Type

Book chapter

Book Title

The Encyclopedia of Diplomacy

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31