Daniel Gargola
Education:
Ph.D., North Carolina, 1988
Biography:
Professor Gargola specializes in the political, religious, and legal history of the Roman republic and early empire. His most recent book, The Shape of the Roman Order, examines conceptions of space in law and cult. His current project examines the use of the calendar in public and cultic law.
Research Interests:
Roman Republic; legal history; rituals
Selected Publications:
- Lands, Laws, and Gods. Magistrates and Ceremony in the Regulation of Public Lands in Republican Rome (Chapel Hill: UNC Press,1995)
- "Aulus Gellius and the Property Qualifications of the Proletarii and the Capite Censi," Classical Philology (1989).
- "The Colonial Commissioners of 218 B.C. and the Foundation of Placentia and Cremona," Athenaeum (1990).
- "Grain Distributions and the Revenue of the Temple of Hera on Samos," Phoenix (1992).