Halliday's ‘City State’ - The Growth of the City State: Lectures on Greek and Roman History. First Series. By W. R. Halliday, M.A., B.Litt., Rathbone Professor of Ancient History in the University of Liverpool. 8vo. Pp. 264. Liverpool : The University Press of Liverpool, Ltd. ; London : Hodder and Stoughton, Ltd., 1923. 7s. 6d. net.

1923 ◽  
Vol 37 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 169-170
Author(s):  
J. L. Myres
1999 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 121-142
Author(s):  
Otto Gerhard Oexle

The title of this essay can be interpreted in two ways. One possibility might be to show how our times in their thinking, patterns of behaviour, and institutional structures still continue to be shaped by that distant era of the Middle Ages. In other words, one could show the lingering impact of the Middle Ages until the present day. This sort of approach brings many things to mind: the division of Europe into East and West, through the Roman and the Byzantine church; medieval philosophy and the influential reception of Roman law and its effects which can still be discerned today; knighthood and courtly culture; the development of the ‘modern’ state; the continuing influence of social groups and their systems of values and institutions such as vassalage, the university, and the city state; and last but not least, the division into competing states and nations that is so distinctive for Europe.


Author(s):  
P. D. A. Garnsey

John Anthony Crook (1921–2007), a Fellow of the British Academy, was a distinguished ancient historian with a special interest in Roman history and law. Among historians, his knowledge and understanding of Roman law was unequalled. Crook's academic career was spent for the most part in the University of Cambridge, and at St John's College. He entered the college as an undergraduate in 1939, and served as a Fellow from 1951 until his death on September 7, 2007. Within the Faculty of Classics he rose to be Professor of ancient history in 1979. Crook was born in Balham, London, the only child of a bandsman in the Grenadier Guards. In his book Law and Life of Rome, he gave a brilliant demonstration of how legal sources might be made accessible and used constructively for social history. In the late 1970s, Crook joined forces with J. G. Wolf to produce an edition of the Murecine Tablets, to which they had been drawn independently.


Author(s):  
Andrew M. Busch

This chapter looks at Austin’s economic and demographic growth from the 1970s to the 1990s. The University of Texas, and especially Dean of the Graduate School of Business George Kozmetsky, were central to this growth. The city, state, and university worked together entrepreneurially to generate growth in the high tech industry. The most important event was the decision of federally-sponsored research consortium Microelectronics and Computer Corporation to locate in Austin in 1983. Many other tech companies came to Austin as well, leading to dramatic growth. This growth, however, reshaped the city physically and became the impetus for a more robust and widespread environmental movement in the city.


1926 ◽  
Vol 19 (26) ◽  
pp. 227
Author(s):  
Frank Burr Marsh ◽  
William Reginald Halliday
Keyword(s):  

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