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Roman Crossings: Theory and Practice in the Roman Republic

Editat de Kathryn Welch, T.W. Hillard
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 9 noi 2005
This title includes eleven new essays, from an international cast that trace the development of political culture in the Roman Republic. Themes include the flourishing of civic society, as with the introduction of the Roman Games, and the emergence of a theory of politeness. How was a Roman aristocrat formed? How did the term 'Optimates' develop from the middle Republic onwards? And how, especially, did the rhetoric of Cicero reflect and adapt to the pressures of civil war in the Republic's climactic and dying years?
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781905125005
ISBN-10: 1905125003
Pagini: 352
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.69 kg
Editura: The Classical Press of Wales (UK)
Colecția Classical Press of Wales
Locul publicării:United Kingdom

Notă biografică

Kathryn Welch, Senior Lecturer in Ancient History at the University of Sydney, has co-edited two previous works with Anton Powell for the Classical Press of Wales, Julius Caesar as Artful Reporter (1998) and Sextus Pompeius (2002), and has published numerous articles on late Republican and Triumviral history.T.W. Hillard, Senior Lecturer in Ancient History at Macquarie University, has published widely on late Republican history, Roman constructions of sexuality and gender, and has co-edited Ancient History in a Modern University (1998).

Cuprins

Theory and Practice in the Roman Republic: An Introduction - T.W. HillardOrigines Ludorum - T.P. WisemanOptimates: An Archaeology - A.M. StoneThe Law That Catulus Passed - Benjamin KellyPriests and Politicians: Reflections on Livy and Cicero's de Domo Sua - David F.C. ThomasCicero's Vir Clarissimus - Simon WhiteheadWhat Caesar Said: Rhetoric and History in Sallust's Coniuratio Catilinae 51 - R.F. TannenbaumCato's Opposition to Caesar in 59 BC - Jane BellemoreCicero Fam. 16.21, Roman Politeness, and the Socialization of Marcus Cicero the Younger - Jon HallStyle and Ideology in the Pro Marcello - B.A. KrostenkoLux and Lumen in Cicero's Rome: A Metaphor for the Res Publica and Her Leaders? - Kathryn Welch