Athens remained legally a free and independent city under the Roman
Empire, preserving her ancient institutions and vaunting her cultural
heritage to promote herself as the archetypal city of Old Greece. Yet
her society underwent a fundamental transformation in the face of
imperial power, as is shown most decisively by the readiness of her
inhabitants to accept Roman citizenship. Drawing primarily on the
complex array of available epigraphical evidence, this book presents a
comprehensive catalogue of the residents of Athens whose nomenclature
proclaims their Roman status, from slaves and freedmen to the holders of
the highest offices. It serves both as a fully referenced prosopography
of the leading families of Roman Athens complete with discussion and
stemmata, and as an onomastic supplement to the author's previous work
on the Lexicon of Greek Personal Names II and Foreign Residents of
Athens by making readily accessible the 240 Roman nomina on record borne
by some 2100 individuals. An appendix offers a reconsideration of the
chronological problems of the period and a new archon list.