Murray2015 - Edinburgh Research Archive
... However, the fact that there is no one pattern for the behaviour of parents and children towards one another in any period of history, including republican Rome, should be noted at the outset.2 Thus, the title of this thesis is elite father and son relationships in the plural. Social expectations c ...
... However, the fact that there is no one pattern for the behaviour of parents and children towards one another in any period of history, including republican Rome, should be noted at the outset.2 Thus, the title of this thesis is elite father and son relationships in the plural. Social expectations c ...
KINSHIP AND POWER
... born the queen Tanaquil adopted him. For Festus Servius Tullius was spurius, meaning an unlawful child, i.e. the child of an unknown father. He qualifies Servius Tullius as the son of the concubine Oclisia who was captured during the siege of Corniculum. He names Spurius Tullius from Tibur as his fa ...
... born the queen Tanaquil adopted him. For Festus Servius Tullius was spurius, meaning an unlawful child, i.e. the child of an unknown father. He qualifies Servius Tullius as the son of the concubine Oclisia who was captured during the siege of Corniculum. He names Spurius Tullius from Tibur as his fa ...
A Study of Greek and Roman Stylistic Elements in the Portraiture of
... Romans. It is, for many, the Romans’ saving grace in originality, since this specific portrait style is not seen in Greek art. However, this view of verism returns to the misconception that, in order for art to be considered “Roman” it must reject Greek artistic concepts, which excludes the other p ...
... Romans. It is, for many, the Romans’ saving grace in originality, since this specific portrait style is not seen in Greek art. However, this view of verism returns to the misconception that, in order for art to be considered “Roman” it must reject Greek artistic concepts, which excludes the other p ...
Founding fathers: An ethnic and gender study of the Iliadic Aeneid
... characters in the Aeneid and giving only limited attention to the second half of the epic. 6 Perhaps because the Dido episode is such fertile ground for intellectual exploration and is just plain fascinating from a literary standpoint, neglect of the second half of the Aeneid, known as the Iliadic ...
... characters in the Aeneid and giving only limited attention to the second half of the epic. 6 Perhaps because the Dido episode is such fertile ground for intellectual exploration and is just plain fascinating from a literary standpoint, neglect of the second half of the Aeneid, known as the Iliadic ...
Kelsey Grant
... people are out of power.20 It is through these political biases that I think much deeper agendas of Ammianus’ show through that hurt his historical authority. He writes so freely about these events and with such anger it struck me that he never really got over the trials and executions that he wrote ...
... people are out of power.20 It is through these political biases that I think much deeper agendas of Ammianus’ show through that hurt his historical authority. He writes so freely about these events and with such anger it struck me that he never really got over the trials and executions that he wrote ...
Parallel Lives: Hannibal and Scipio in Livy`s Third Decade
... led victorious campaigns in Spain and recovered it from the enemy. Likewise, he had proceeded from Spain to his enemy’s homeland, and, after numerous field victories, had come near to annihilating its power. As Hannibal rightly states at the opening of this portion of the speech, what Scipio is at Z ...
... led victorious campaigns in Spain and recovered it from the enemy. Likewise, he had proceeded from Spain to his enemy’s homeland, and, after numerous field victories, had come near to annihilating its power. As Hannibal rightly states at the opening of this portion of the speech, what Scipio is at Z ...
the roman villas of wales - oURspace Home
... Britain,” which explores villa architecture and typology.2 Chapter three, “The Mosaic Pavements” by D. J. Smith, explores the development of mosaic pavements in Roman Britain, while chapter four, “Furniture in Roman Britain,” by Joan Liversidge, focuses on the furniture and interior design of Romano ...
... Britain,” which explores villa architecture and typology.2 Chapter three, “The Mosaic Pavements” by D. J. Smith, explores the development of mosaic pavements in Roman Britain, while chapter four, “Furniture in Roman Britain,” by Joan Liversidge, focuses on the furniture and interior design of Romano ...
Death in Motion - UCLA Department of Classics
... to that of the human participants in forum events.20 In this case the artist selected, from among all the statues in the forum, a depiction of Marsyas, which was associated with libertas, and a group with Italia, her children, and the seated Trajan, which celebrated the alimentary program. The relie ...
... to that of the human participants in forum events.20 In this case the artist selected, from among all the statues in the forum, a depiction of Marsyas, which was associated with libertas, and a group with Italia, her children, and the seated Trajan, which celebrated the alimentary program. The relie ...
Death in Motion: Funeral Processions in the Roman Forum
... to that of the human participants in forum events.20 In this case the artist selected, from among all the statues in the forum, a depiction of Marsyas, which was associated with libertas, and a group with Italia, her children, and the seated Trajan, which celebrated the alimentary program. The relie ...
... to that of the human participants in forum events.20 In this case the artist selected, from among all the statues in the forum, a depiction of Marsyas, which was associated with libertas, and a group with Italia, her children, and the seated Trajan, which celebrated the alimentary program. The relie ...
Roman Isis and the Pendulum of Tolerance in the Empire
... To understand how Isis became such an intense focus of Roman political discourse, we must first look at her religious development and dissemination throughout the Mediterranean. From there, we will examine Isis’ introduction to Rome (ca. 90 BCE) through the first fifty years of imperial rule (27 BCE ...
... To understand how Isis became such an intense focus of Roman political discourse, we must first look at her religious development and dissemination throughout the Mediterranean. From there, we will examine Isis’ introduction to Rome (ca. 90 BCE) through the first fifty years of imperial rule (27 BCE ...
In Death, Immortality - Trinity College Digital Repository
... is also described as extremely greedy, so much so that “…not even in time of peace…did he abstain from lying and perjury for the sake of profit.” 20 Richardson argues that Appian’s criticism partly comes from his perspective as a Roman subject in the second century. As such, Appian might have believ ...
... is also described as extremely greedy, so much so that “…not even in time of peace…did he abstain from lying and perjury for the sake of profit.” 20 Richardson argues that Appian’s criticism partly comes from his perspective as a Roman subject in the second century. As such, Appian might have believ ...
Περίληψη : Άλλα Ονόματα Τόπος και Χρόνος Γέννησης Κύρια Ιδιότητα
... Gallienus is portrayed in the Latin literary tradition as an evil, cruel and frivolous emperor. His only positive feature is his ability as a strategist. This criticism derives mainly from the historiographers-biographers of the 4th century, who sought the reasons for the decline of the empire in th ...
... Gallienus is portrayed in the Latin literary tradition as an evil, cruel and frivolous emperor. His only positive feature is his ability as a strategist. This criticism derives mainly from the historiographers-biographers of the 4th century, who sought the reasons for the decline of the empire in th ...
Christianity and Gender in Imperial Roman Policy, 57-235.
... Michigan University, the University of Michigan, Concordia College, and the countless others affected by my inter-library loan account were of immeasurable assistance in acquiring the texts I needed. ...
... Michigan University, the University of Michigan, Concordia College, and the countless others affected by my inter-library loan account were of immeasurable assistance in acquiring the texts I needed. ...
Comparing Strategies of the 2d Punic War
... Hannibal, the "Father of Strategy." Carthage, however, lost the 2d Punic War decisively and survived less than a century more; Hannibal was a strategic failure. If so, why did he fail? The failure was certainly not at the tactical or operational level of war. Hannibal won every major battle against ...
... Hannibal, the "Father of Strategy." Carthage, however, lost the 2d Punic War decisively and survived less than a century more; Hannibal was a strategic failure. If so, why did he fail? The failure was certainly not at the tactical or operational level of war. Hannibal won every major battle against ...
The Spartacus War - Study Strategically
... But the Romans had a lot more on their minds than Spartacus. In 73 BC Rome was a city of scar Italy was a peninsula divided between Rome and its often unwilling allies. Over the centuries Rom had conquered Italy’s hodgepodge of peoples, including Greeks, Etruscans, Samnites, Lucanians an Bruttians. ...
... But the Romans had a lot more on their minds than Spartacus. In 73 BC Rome was a city of scar Italy was a peninsula divided between Rome and its often unwilling allies. Over the centuries Rom had conquered Italy’s hodgepodge of peoples, including Greeks, Etruscans, Samnites, Lucanians an Bruttians. ...
Author`s Note - Phoenix Labs
... come with an axe to grind. Even shorter is the discussion by Florus (c. AD 100-150), but his concise remarks are full of significance. These three writers relied on important but now mostly lost earlier works by Sallust (86-35 BC) and Livy (59 BC - AD 12). Almost nothing of Livy’s discussion of Spar ...
... come with an axe to grind. Even shorter is the discussion by Florus (c. AD 100-150), but his concise remarks are full of significance. These three writers relied on important but now mostly lost earlier works by Sallust (86-35 BC) and Livy (59 BC - AD 12). Almost nothing of Livy’s discussion of Spar ...
Untitled
... theme could still have influenced the way in which the theme was constructed, as well as how it was perceived by its audience. Secondly, the relationship between selection and interpretation becomes problematic. Are we selecting our sources because the resulting interpretation makes sense, or becaus ...
... theme could still have influenced the way in which the theme was constructed, as well as how it was perceived by its audience. Secondly, the relationship between selection and interpretation becomes problematic. Are we selecting our sources because the resulting interpretation makes sense, or becaus ...
Romanization of Hispania
The Romanization of Hispania is the process by which Roman or Latin culture was introduced into the Iberian Peninsula during the period of Roman rule over it, or parts of it.