Abstract
In the heyday of British imperialism some fifty years ago, when Lord Cromer could find that the empire was “the main title which makes us great”, imperialists were apt to compare the British with the Roman empire and to seek “in the history of imperial Rome for any facts or commentaries gleaned from ancient times which might be of service to the modern empire of which we are so justly proud”.1 A critic of imperialism, J. A. Hobson, sourly remarked of such enterprises that “history devises reasons why the lessons of past empires do not apply to our own”. Prima facie, however, the comparison was encouraging. Both the Romans and the modern imperial powers claimed that it was their purpose to govern in the interests of the subjects; both had undoubtedly established peace and order in a large part of the world; both had extended their own law and their own civilization.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,History
Reference47 articles.
1. Robinson R. and Gallagher J. , argue at length in Africa and the Victorians (1961),
2. Oliver J.H. , The Ruling Power (in Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, 1953),
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