Unwritten Rome
Title | Unwritten Rome PDF eBook |
Author | T. P. Wiseman |
Publisher | Liverpool University Press |
Pages | 376 |
Release | 2022-04-01 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1802079327 |
In Unwritten Rome, a new book by the author of Myths of Rome, T.P. Wiseman presents us with an imaginative and appealing picture of the early society of pre-literary Rome—as a free and uninhibited world in which the arts and popular entertainments flourished. This original angle allows the voice of the Roman people to be retrieved empathetically from contemporary artefacts and figured monuments, and from selected passages of later literature.How do you understand a society that didn’t write down its own history? That is the problem with early Rome, from the Bronze Age down to the conquest of Italy around 300 BC. The texts we have to use were all written centuries later, and their view of early Rome is impossibly anachronistic. But some possibly authentic evidence may survive, if we can only tease it out – like the old story of a Roman king acting as a magician, or the traditional custom that may originate in the practice of ritual prostitution. This book consists of eighteen attempts to find such material and make sense of it.
A Summary of the Roman Civil Law
Title | A Summary of the Roman Civil Law PDF eBook |
Author | Sir Patrick MacChombaich de Colquhoun |
Publisher | |
Pages | 724 |
Release | 1849 |
Genre | Canon law |
ISBN |
A Summary of the Roman Civil Law
Title | A Summary of the Roman Civil Law PDF eBook |
Author | Patrick Mac Chombaich De Colquhoun |
Publisher | |
Pages | 724 |
Release | 1849 |
Genre | Roman law |
ISBN |
Institutions and Ideology in Republican Rome
Title | Institutions and Ideology in Republican Rome PDF eBook |
Author | Henriette van der Blom |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Pages | 764 |
Release | 2018-05-17 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1108606156 |
This volume brings together a distinguished international group of researchers to explore public speech in Republican Rome in its institutional and ideological contexts. The focus throughout is on the interaction between argument, speaker, delivery and action. The chapters consider how speeches acted alongside other factors - such as the identity of the speaker, his alliances, the deployment of invective against opponents, physical location and appearance of other members of the audience, and non-rhetorical threats or incentives - to affect the beliefs and behaviour of the audience. Together they offer a range of approaches to these issues and bring attention back to the content of public speech in Republican Rome as well as its form and occurrence. The book will be of interest not only to ancient historians, but also to those working on ancient oratory and to historians and political theorists working on public speech.
Illiterate Geography in Classical Athens and Rome
Title | Illiterate Geography in Classical Athens and Rome PDF eBook |
Author | Daniela Dueck |
Publisher | Routledge |
Pages | 266 |
Release | 2020-11-26 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 100022502X |
This study is devoted to the channels through which geographic knowledge circulated in classical societies outside of textual transmission. It explores understanding of geography among the non-elites, as opposed to scholarly and scientific geography solely in written form which was the province of a very small number of learned people. It deals with non-literary knowledge of geography, geography not derived from texts, as it was available to people, educated or not, who did not read geographic works. This main issue is composed of two central questions: how, if at all, was geographic data available outside of textual transmission and in contexts in which there was no need to write or read? And what could the public know of geography? In general, three groups of sources are relevant to this quest: oral communications preserved in writing; public non-textual performances; and visual artefacts and monuments. All of these are examined as potential sources for the aural and visual geographic knowledge of Greco-Roman publics. This volume will be of interest to anyone working on geography in the ancient world and to those studying non-elite culture.
The Genesis of Roman Architecture
Title | The Genesis of Roman Architecture PDF eBook |
Author | John North Hopkins |
Publisher | Yale University Press |
Pages | 269 |
Release | 2016-01-01 |
Genre | Architecture |
ISBN | 0300211813 |
An important new look at Rome's earliest buildings and their context within the broader tradition of Mediterranean culture This groundbreaking study traces the development of Roman architecture and its sculpture from the earliest days to the middle of the 5th century BCE. Existing narratives cast the Greeks as the progenitors of classical art and architecture or rely on historical sources dating centuries after the fact to establish the Roman context. Author John North Hopkins, however, allows the material and visual record to play the primary role in telling the story of Rome's origins, synthesizing important new evidence from recent excavations. Hopkins's detailed account of urban growth and artistic, political, and social exchange establishes strong parallels with communities across the Mediterranean. From the late 7th century, Romans looked to increasingly distant lands for shifts in artistic production. By the end of the archaic period they were building temples that would outstrip the monumentality of even those on the Greek mainland. The book's extensive illustrations feature new reconstructions, allowing readers a rare visual exploration of this fragmentary evidence.
The Fragments of the Roman Historians
Title | The Fragments of the Roman Historians PDF eBook |
Author | Tim Cornell |
Publisher | |
Pages | 2719 |
Release | 2013 |
Genre | Historians |
ISBN | 0199277052 |
"This title is a definitive and comprehensive edition of the fragmentary texts of all the Roman historians whose works are lost. Historical writing was an important part of the literary culture of ancient Rome, and its best-known exponents, including Sallust, Livy, Tacitus, and Suetonius, provide much of our knowledge of Roman history. However, these authors constitute only a small minority of the Romans who wrote historical works from around 200 BC to AD 250. In this period we know of more than 100 writers of history, biography, and memoirs whose works no longer survive for us to read. They include well-known figures such as Cato the Elder, Sulla, Cicero, and the emperors Augustus, Tiberius, Claudius, Hadrian, and Septimius Severus"--Page 4 of cover.