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Corey
Ellithorpe
Author
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda.
The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups.
Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
Summer 2017
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics, Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
History
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman
World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the
communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman
Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked
to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a
better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The
body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual
coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding
inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile
medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a
larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage
functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element.
I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that
enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions
and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication
machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the
emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion
is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial
coinage.
Summer 2017
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics, Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting
institution
History
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
Summer 2017
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics, Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
History
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
Summer 2017
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics, Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
History
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
2017-08
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics, Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
History
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics, Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
History
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
2017-08
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics, Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
History
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
2017-08
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics, Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
History
Richard
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
2017-08
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics, Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
History
Richard J. A.
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
2017-08
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Degree granting institution
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics; Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
History
Richard J. A.
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
2017-08
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Degree granting institution
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics, Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
History
Richard J. A.
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
2017-08
Corey
Ellithorpe
Creator
Department of History
College of Arts and Sciences
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
This dissertation examines the role of Roman Imperial coinage in the communication of Roman ideology and propaganda. From a database of more than 300,000 Roman Imperial coins of the Principate, each containing detailed archaeological data and linked to GIS-mapping software, a variety of interconnected analyses are conducted to provide a better understanding of how Roman coinage was used a medium of Imperial propaganda. The body of numismatic evidence of imperial Rome consists of millions of surviving individual coins, out of which thousands of iconographical combinations of type and corresponding inscriptions have been identified. I examine the role that coinage played as a mobile medium of politically persuasive communication for Rome to numerous groups. Within a larger political propaganda program at work during the early Roman Empire, coinage functioned as the most ubiquitous, tangible, immediate, variable, and integrated element. I argue that coinage functioned as a conscious instrument of political propaganda that enabled varying messages to be purposefully disseminated to different geographical regions and to distinct ranks of Roman society. This was a structured and efficient communication machine capable of fine-tuning the presentation of a particular message to meet the emperor’s current concerns. Moreover, I argue that a desire to manipulate public opinion is the mainspring for the vast range of coinage types found in Roman imperial coinage.
2017
Ancient history
Numismatics; Propaganda
eng
Doctor of Philosophy
Dissertation
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Graduate School
Degree granting institution
Richard J. A.
Talbert
Thesis advisor
Fred
Naiden
Thesis advisor
Marcus
Bull
Thesis advisor
Luca
Grillo
Thesis advisor
David
Wigg-Wolf
Thesis advisor
text
2017-08
Circulating Imperial Ideology: Coins as Propaganda in the Roman World
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proquest
2017-07-20T15:30:42Z
2019-08-15T00:00:00
yes