This significant book presents a stimulating discussion of the way in which the unique local identity of Palmyra, the famous caravan city in the Syrian steppe, found expression in the Roman period. Its focus is both on the city's peripheral location, between Rome and Parthia, and on its own internal development as a community. Smith makes an important contribution to the on-going debate on Palmyrene tribalism, the city's role in the long-distance trade and its position in the frontier zone, and the identity of Palmyrenes abroad. The book will doubtless help in granting Palmyra its rightful place in the center of modern scholarship on the Classical world.