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The Truth About Diocletian and Inflation - Slate
Follow stories by Matthew Yglesias. MySlate is a new tool that you track your favorite parts Slate. You can follow authors and sections, track comment threads you're interested in, and more. Since the subject of inflation under Emperor ...
Life amid the Roman ruins in Croatia - Seattle Times
In the fourth century A.D., when the Roman Emperor Diocletian retired, he built a vast residence for his golden years here in his native Dalmatia. When Rome fell, the palace was abandoned. Eventually, a medieval town sprouted from its abandoned shell.
Health Care: No, the State Doesn't Know Best - Town Hall
PRICES WERE OUT OF CONTROL at the end of 3 rd-century Rome, and the Emperor Diocletian was determined to rein them in. In AD 301 he issued his famous Edict on Prices, a complex piece of legislation that banned speculation and established price ...
On health care, state doesn’t know best - Boston Globe
PRICES WERE out of control at the end of third-century Rome, and the Emperor Diocletian was determined to rein them in. In AD 301 he issued his famous Edict on Prices, a complex piece of legislation that banned speculation and established price ...
Split, Croatia: a cultural city guide - Daily Telegraph
No wonder the Roman Emperor Diocletian chose this spot in Croatia to build his lavish retirement palace in AD295. Today, despite centuries of additions, the palace remains the heartbeat of Split's old town; a unique mix of architecture in a maze of narrow streets.
Roman Travel Speeds: An Excellent New Toy - Forbes
Cost is a little more difficult: they provide costs in the silver denarii of 301 (it’s a good time to measure costs from as we’ve the edicts of Diocletian on maximum costs allowable) but translating those into modern sums is near futile.
Paul Krugman To Ron Paul: 'You're Living In A World That Was 150 Years Ago' (VIDEO) - Huffington Post
Krugman zinged back: "I am not a defender of the economic policies of Diocletian," referring to the Roman emperor. U.S. policy makers established the nation's first central bank in the late 1700s, but the Federal Reserve system as we know it ...
Don’t Know Much About (Ancient) History - New York Times Blogs
I responded that I am not a defender of the economic policies of the Emperor Diocletian. Actually, though, appeals to what supposedly happened somewhere in the distant past are quite common on the goldbug side of economics. And it’s kind of telling.
EU: International Day against Homophobia and Transphobia - Worldnews.com
In 9 AD the territory of today's Croatia became part of the Roman Empire. Emperor Diocletian built a massive palace in Split where he retired from politics in AD 305. During the 5th century the last Roman Emperor Julius Nepos ruled his small ...
Massachusetts Moves Toward Health-Care Price Controls. Is America Next? - Forbes
Prices were out of control at the end of third-century Rome, and the Emperor Diocletian was determined to rein them in. In AD 301 he issued his famous Edict on Prices, a complex piece of legislation that banned speculation and established price ...