Law and Enforcement in Ptolemaic Egypt

£109.00

Law and Enforcement in Ptolemaic Egypt

African history Ancient history Archaeology by period / region Crime and criminology

Author: John Bauschatz

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Language: English

Published by: Cambridge University Press

Published on: 14 October 2013

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 872 Kb

ISBN: 9781107424517


Overview

This book examines the activities of a broad array of police officers in Ptolemaic Egypt (323–30 BC) and argues that Ptolemaic police officials enjoyed great autonomy, providing assistance to even the lowest levels of society when crimes were committed.

Throughout the nearly 300 years of Ptolemaic rule, victims of crime in all areas of the Egyptian countryside called on local police officials to investigate crimes; hold trials; and arrest, question and sometimes even imprison wrongdoers.

Drawing on a large body of textual evidence for the cultural, social and economic interactions between state and citizen, John Bauschatz demonstrates that the police system was efficient, effective, and largely independent of central government controls.

No other law enforcement organization exhibiting such a degree of autonomy and flexibility appears in extant evidence from the rest of the Greco-Roman world.

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