[1]
Alcock, S.E. 1997. The early Roman Empire in the East. Oxbow.
[2]
Alföldy, G. 1974. Noricum. Routledge and Kegan Paul.
[3]
Alston, R. 2003. Soldier and society in Roman Egypt: a social history. Routledge.
[4]
Alston, R. 2001. The city in Roman and Byzantine Egypt. Routledge.
[5]
Ball, W. 2000. Rome in the East: the transformation of an empire. Routledge.
[6]
Barker, G. et al. 1985. Cyrenaica in antiquity. B.A.R.
[7]
Blagg, T.F.C. and Millett, M. 1990. The early Roman Empire in the West. Oxbow Books.
[8]
Butcher, K. 2003. Roman Syria. British Museum.
[9]
Carroll, M. 2001. Romans, Celts and Germans: the German provinces of Rome. Tempus.
[10]
Christie, N. 2011. The fall of the Western Roman Empire: an archaeological and historical perspective. Bloomsbury Academic.
[11]
Creighton, J.D. et al. 1999. Roman Germany: studies in cultural interaction. Journal of Roman Archaeology L.L.C.
[12]
Curchin, L.A. 1991. Roman Spain: conquest and assimilation. Routledge.
[13]
Di Vita, A. et al. 1999. Libya: the lost cities of the Roman Empire. Könemann.
[14]
Eckstein, Arthur M. 2007. Hellenistic Culture and Society : Mediterranean Anarchy, Interstate War, and the Rise of Rome (1). University of California Press.
[15]
Elsner, J. 1998. Imperial Rome and Christian triumph: the art of the Roman Empire A.D. 100-450. Oxford University Press.
[16]
Garnsey, P. and Saller, R.P. 2014. The Roman Empire: Economy, Society and Culture. Bloomsbury Academic.
[17]
Green, P. 2007. The Hellenistic age: a history. Modern Library.
[18]
Hingley, R. 2005. Globalizing Roman culture: unity, diversity and empire. Routledge.
[19]
Hölscher, T. et al. 2004. The language of images in Roman art. Cambridge University Press.
[20]
J. J. Wilkes 2005. The Roman Danube: An Archaeological Survey. The Journal of Roman Studies. 95, (2005), 124–225.
[21]
Keay, S.J. and Terrenato, N. 2001. Italy and the West: comparative issues in Romanization. Oxbow Books.
[22]
Laurence, R. et al. 2011. The city in the Roman West, c.250 BC-c.AD 250. Cambridge University Press.
[23]
Lomas, K. 1996. Roman Italy, 338 BC-AD 200: a sourcebook. UCL Press.
[24]
Lomas, K. 1993. Rome and the Western Greeks, 350 BC-AD 200: conquest and acculturation in Southern Italy. Routledge.
[25]
Mattingly, D. 2004. Being Roman: expressing identity in a provincial setting. Journal of Roman Archaeology. 17, (2004), 5–25. https://doi.org/10.1017/S104775940000814X.
[26]
Mattingly, D. 2002. Vulgar and weak ‘Romanization’, or time for a paradigm shift? S. Keay and N. Terrenato (edd.), ITALY AND THE WEST. COMPARATIVE ISSUES IN ROMANIZATION (Oxbow Books, Oxford 2001). Pp. xxii + 233, 44 figs. ISBN 1 84217 042 2. £24. Journal of Roman Archaeology. 15, (2002), 536–540. https://doi.org/10.1017/S1047759400014355.
[27]
Mattingly, D.J. 2014. Imperialism, power, and identity: experiencing the Roman empire. Princeton University Press.
[28]
Mattingly, D.J. 1995. Tripolitania. Batsford.
[29]
Millar, F. 1967. The Roman Empire and its neighbours. Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
[30]
Mócsy, A. and Frere, S. 1974. Pannonia and Upper Moesia: a history of the middle Danube provinces of the Roman Empire. Routledge and Kegan Paul.
[31]
Morris, I. and Scheidel, W. 2009. The dynamics of ancient empires: state power from Assyria to Byzantium. Oxford University Press.
[32]
Onians, J. 1999. Classical art and the cultures of Greece and Rome. Yale University Press.
[33]
Richardson, J.S. 1996. The Romans in Spain. Blackwell.
[34]
Roymans, N. 1996. From the sword to the plough: three studies on the earliest Romanisation of Northern Gaul. Amsterdam University Press.
[35]
Scheidel, W. 2001. Death on the Nile: disease and the demography of Roman Egypt. Brill.
[36]
Scheidel, W. ed. 2012. The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Economy. Cambridge University Press.
[37]
Scheidel, W. et al. 2007. The Cambridge economic history of the Greco-Roman world. Cambridge University Press.
[38]
Scott, S. and Webster, J. 2003. Roman imperialism and provincial art. Cambridge University Press.
[39]
Todd, M. et al. 2004. A companion to Roman Britain. Historical Association.
[40]
Wells, P.S. 2001. Beyond Celts, Germans and Scythians: archaeology and identity in Iron Age Europe. Duckworth Academic.
[41]
Wells, P.S. 1999. The barbarians speak: how the conquered peoples shaped Roman Europe. Princeton University Press.
[42]
Woolf, G. 1998. Becoming Roman: the origins of provincial civilization in Gaul. Cambridge University Press.
[43]
Woolf, Greg 2012. Rome : An Empire’s Story. Oxford University Press, USA.
[44]
The Oxford Handbook of Roman Studies.