CITIZENSHIP, UNIVERSALISM AND STOIC COSMOPOLITANISM: THE ROMAN CASE

Affiliation auteursAffiliation ok
TitreCITIZENSHIP, UNIVERSALISM AND STOIC COSMOPOLITANISM: THE ROMAN CASE
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuteursGonzales A
JournalARYS-ANTIGUEDAD RELIGIONES Y SOCIEDADES
Volume16
Pagination19-45
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN1575-166X
Mots-clésCitizenship, Cosmopolitanism, Rome, Stoicism, Universalism
Résumé

The question of citizenship very quickly went beyond the problem of simple legal status within the Roman territorial empire to raise the question of the philosophical and political articulation of a somewhat deterritorialized citizenship, since being a Roman citizen no longer necessarily means living in Rome or coming to exercise your civil rights in Rome. The territorial extension and the more or less rapid integration of populations has prompted reflection on the relationship between the individual citizen and the civic group now dispersed throughout the empire. If there are Roman citizens throughout the empire, is citizenship simply a Roman citizenship that spreads throughout the imperial space while preserving Roman centrality or, on the contrary, is it acquiring such a specificity that it can be understood as a supra-civic citizenship that acquires a universal character while retaining its initial specificities or does it become a citizenship that replaces the very idea of the civic? The debates on these potential changes have stirred up lawyers, philosophers and politicians between the Republic and the Empire.

DOI10.20318/ARYS.2018.4557