Attempts to create a new concept of politico-economic roles in the ancient world - based on the practice both in Greece and Rome of the rich providing voluntarily for food and entertainment for the poor.
Paul Veyne was a French historian and a specialist on Ancient Rome. A former student of the École normale supérieure and member of the École française de Rome, he was professor at the Collège de France.
Professeur honoraire au Collège de France, Paul Veyne était un des plus grands historiens français de l’Antiquité romaine. Ses nombreuses publications sur la sociologie romaine ou les mythes grecs, rédigés d’une plume alerte et joyeuse, l’ont fait connaître du grand public.
A study of the ancient practice of euergetism: the custom of political figures paying for public works and civic benefits out of their private funds, from the Greek cities to the Roman Republic and Empire. Perhaps more interesting for Veyne's reflections on the relationship between ideology and political/economic systems and on historical method than on euergetism per se. Also interesting as a very different style of academic writing than that currently in vogue. Although I confess to skimming the last hundred pages...