Download Journal of Roman Studies 104 (2014)

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Cursus honorum wikipedia , lookup

Constitutional reforms of Sulla wikipedia , lookup

Classics wikipedia , lookup

Alpine regiments of the Roman army wikipedia , lookup

Daqin wikipedia , lookup

Travel in Classical antiquity wikipedia , lookup

Military of ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Roman architecture wikipedia , lookup

Slovakia in the Roman era wikipedia , lookup

Food and dining in the Roman Empire wikipedia , lookup

Battle of the Teutoburg Forest wikipedia , lookup

Wales in the Roman era wikipedia , lookup

Roman army of the late Republic wikipedia , lookup

Roman art wikipedia , lookup

Demography of the Roman Empire wikipedia , lookup

Roman Republican governors of Gaul wikipedia , lookup

History of the Roman Constitution wikipedia , lookup

Romanization of Hispania wikipedia , lookup

Switzerland in the Roman era wikipedia , lookup

Education in ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Roman agriculture wikipedia , lookup

Roman economy wikipedia , lookup

Roman technology wikipedia , lookup

Roman funerary practices wikipedia , lookup

Culture of ancient Rome wikipedia , lookup

Early Roman army wikipedia , lookup

Roman historiography wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
THE JOURNAL OF ROMAN STUDIES
VOLUME 104 (2014)
CONTENTS
ARTICLES
FEDERICO SANTANGELO, Roman Politics in the 70s B.C.: A Story of Realignments? 1–
27
GREGORY S. ALDRETE, Hammers, Axes, Bulls, and Blood: Some Practical Aspects of
Roman Animal Sacrifice, 28–50
JENNIFER INGLEHEART,
Play on the Proper Names of Individuals in the Catullan
Corpus: Wordplay, the Iambic Tradition, and the Late Republican Culture of Public
Abuse, 51–72
ALESSANDRO SCHIESARO, Materiam Superabat Opus: Lucretius Metamorphosed, 73–
104
KIRK FREUDENBURG, Recusatio as Political Theatre: Horace’s Letter to Augustus, 105–
132
PETER STACEY, The Princely Republic, 133–154
COURTNEY ANN ROBY, Seneca’s Scientific Fictions: Models as Fictions in the Natural
Questions, 155–180
ZOË M. TAN, Subversive Geography in Tacitus’ Germania, 181–204
TRISTAN POWER, Suetonius’ Tacitus, 205–225
REVIEW ARTICLE
KATE COOPER, The Long Shadow of Constantine, 226–302
REVIEWS
(in alphabetical order)
Adams, J. N., Social Variation and the Latin Language (by James Clackson), 303
Allély, A., La Déclaration d’hostis sous la république romaine (by Saskia T. Roselaar), 273
Ameling, W., H. M. Cotton, W. Eck, B. Isaac, A. Kushnir-Stein, H. Misgav, J. Price and A.
Yardeni (Eds), Corpus Inscriptionum Iudaeae/Palaestinae: A Multi-Lingual Corpus of
the Inscriptions from Alexander to Muhammad, Volume II: Caesarea and the Middle
Coast, 1121–2160 (by Benet Salway), 286
Anderson, Jr, J. C., Roman Architecture in Provence (by Janet DeLaine), 257
Arena, V., Libertas and the Practice of Politics in the Late Roman Republic (by Alexander
Yakobson), 274
BÖRNER, S., Marc Aurel im Spiegel seiner Münzen und Medaillons: eine vergleichende
Analyse der stadtrömischen Prägungen zwischen 138 und 180 n.Chr (by Clare Rowan),
279
Badel, C. and C. Settipani, Les Stratégies familiales dans l’antiquité tardive. Actes du
colloque organisé par le C.N.R.S. USR 710 «L’Année Épigraphiques» tenu à La
Maison des Sciences de l’Homme les 5–7 février 2009 (by Geoffrey Nathan), 368
Bardill, J., Constantine, Divine Emperor of the Christian Golden Age (by Elizabeth
Marlowe), 343
Becker, J. A. and N. Terrenato (Eds), Roman Republican Villas: Architecture, Context, and
Ideology (by Amy Russell), 249
Bellelli, V., Le Origini degli Etruschi. Storia archeologia antropologia. Atti del convegno (by
Jean MacIntosh Turfa), 241
Birk, S., Depicting the Dead. Self-representation and Commemoration on Roman Sarcophagi
with Portraits (by Glenys Davies), 264
Blömer, M. and E. Winter (Eds), Iuppiter Dolichenus. Vom Lokalkult zur Reichsreligion (by
Rubina Raja), 284
Blaudeau, P., Le Siège de Rome et l’Orient (448–536): étude géo-ecclésiologique (by Julia
Hillner), 354
Boin, D., Ostia in Late Antiquity (by L. Bouke van der Meer), 366
Bowman, A. and A. Wilson (Eds), The Roman Agricultural Economy. Organization,
Investment and Production (by Dominic Rathbone), 294
Bradley, K. and P. Cartledge (Eds), The Cambridge World History of Slavery. Volume I. The
Ancient Mediterranean World (by Myles Lavan), 289
Bradley, M., Rome, Pollution and Propriety: Dirt, Disease and Hygiene in the Eternal City
from Antiquity to Modernity (by Zena Kamash), 252
Braund, S. and J. Osgood (Eds), A Companion to Persius and Juvenal (by Tom Geue), 336
Briscoe, J., A Commentary on Livy, Books 41–45 (by Virginia Clark), 313
Brunt, P. A., Studies in Stoicism (ed. M. Griffin and A. Samuels, with M. Crawford) (by
Malcolm Schofield), 276
Buckley, E. and M. T. Dinter (Eds), A Companion to the Neronian Age (by Erica M. Bexley),
323
Burgess, R. W. and M. Kulikowski, Mosaics of Time: The Latin Chronicle Traditions from
the First Century BC to the Sixth Century AD. Vol. I. A Historical Introduction to the
Chronicle Genre from its Origins to the High Middle Ages (by Andy Hilkens), 341
Bussels, S., The Animated Image: Roman Theory on Naturalism, Vividness and Divine Power
(by Jeremy J. Tanner), 268
Cappuccini, L., Lo Scarico archeologico di Monte San Paolo a Chiusi (by Corinna Riva),
243
Cascino, R., H. di Giuseppe and H. L. Patterson (Eds), Veii: The Historical Topography of
the Ancient City: A Restudy of John Ward-Perkins’s Survey (by Jamie Sewell), 247
Christie, N. and A. Augenti (Eds), Vrbes Extinctae: Archaeologies of Abandoned Classical
Towns (by Simon Esmonde Cleary), 367
Conant, J. P., Staying Roman. Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean, 439–
700 (by A. H. Merrills), 349
Cotton, H. M., L. di Segni, W. Eck, B. Issac, A. Kushnir-Stein, H. Misgav, J. Price, I. Roll
and A. Yardeni (Eds), Corpus Inscriptionum Iudaeae/Palaestinae: A Multi-Lingual
Corpus of the Inscriptions from Alexander to Muhammad, Volume I: Jerusalem, Part I,
1–704 (by Benet Salway), 286
Daniel-Hughes, C., The Salvation of the Flesh in Tertullian of Carthage: Dressing for the
Resurrection (by Mary Harlow), 298
de Nie, G., Poetics of Wonder: Testimonies of the New Christian Miracles in the Late Antique
Latin World (by Josef Lössl), 357
Dekel, E., Virgil’s Homeric Lens (by James Burbidge), 317
Dossey, L., Peasant and Empire in Christian North Africa (by John Weisweiler), 350
Dupraz, E., Sabellian Demonstratives: Forms and Functions (by Katherine Mcdonald), 304
Esposito, P. (Ed.), Marco Anneo Lucano, Bellum Civile (Pharsalia), Libro IV (by Martin T.
Dinter), 334
Evans, J. D. (Ed.), A Companion to the Archaeology of the Roman Republic (by Christopher
Siwicki), 250
Fear, A., J. Fernández Ubiña and M. Marcos (Eds), The Role of the Bishop in Late Antiquity:
Conflict and Compromise (by David M. Gwynn), 352
Fitzgerald, W., How to Read a Latin Poem (by Anthony Bowen), 308
Flower, R., Emperors and Bishops in Late Roman Invective (by Catherine Ware), 353
Forsythe, G., Time in Roman Religion: One Thousand Years of Religious History (by Jason
P. Davies), 283
Fulford, M. and E. Durham (Eds), Seeing Red: New Economic and Social Perspectives on
Terra Sigillata (by Victoria Leitch), 262
Günther, H.-C. (Ed.), Brill’s Companion to Horace (by Victoria Moul), 319
Galinier, M. and F. Baratte (Eds), Iconographie funéraire et société: corpus antique,
approches nouvelles? (by Janet Huskinson), 265
Gangloff, A. (Ed.), Lieux de mémoire en orient grec à l’époque impériale (by Zahra Newby),
281
Garcea, A., Caesar’s De Analogia (by Sarah Culpepper Stroup), 315
Gardner, H. H., Gendering Time in Augustan Love Elegy (by Genevieve Lively), 322
Gehn, U., Ehrenstatuen in der spätantike: Chlamydati und Togati (by Julia Lenaghan), 369
Gemeinhardt, P. and J. Leemans (Eds), Christian Martyrdom in Late Antiquity (300–450
AD): History and Discourse, Tradition and Religious Identity (by Sophie LunnRockliffe), 356
Gibson, R. K. and R. Morello, Reading the Letters of Pliny the Younger: An Introduction (by
Noelle Zeiner-Carmichael), 327
Gowers, E. (Ed.), Horace: Satires Book I (by Kirk Freudenburg), 320
Grey, C., Constructing Communities in the Late Roman Countryside (by John Weisweiler),
350
Griffin, M. T., Seneca on Society: A Guide to De Beneficiis (by James Ker), 333
Grillo, L., The Art of Caesar’s Bellum Civile: Literature, Ideology, and Community (by W.
Jeffrey Tatum), 314
Gurd, S., Work in Progress. Literary Revision as Social Performance in Ancient Rome (by
Joseph A. Howley), 308
Hardie, P. R., Rumour and Renown: Representations of Fama in Western Literature (by
Gareth Williams), 339
Harper, K., From Shame to Sin: the Christian Transformation of Sexual Morality in Late
Antiquity (by Jacob Latham), 358
Hin, S., The Demography of Roman Italy: Population Dynamics in an Ancient Conquest
Society, 201 BCE–14 CE (by Kyle Harper), 275
Hobbs, R., Currency and Exchange in Ancient Pompeii: Coins from the AAPP Excavations at
Regio VI, Insula I (by Colin P. Elliott), 260
Hurka, F., Die Asinaria des Plautus: Einleitung und Kommentar (by David M. Christenson),
310
Jacobs, I., Aesthetic Maintenance of Civic Space: The ‘Classical’ City from the 4th to the 7th
C. AD (by Gareth Sears), 363
Johnson, P., Economic Evidence and the Changing Nature of Urban Space in Late Antique
Rome (by Victor M. Martínez), 365
Johnson, P. and M. Millett (Eds), Archaeological Survey and the City (by William Bowden),
245
König, J., Saints and Symposiasts: The Literature of Food and the Symposium in GrecoRoman and Early Christian Culture (by John Wilkins), 296
Keay, S. (Ed.), Rome, Portus and the Mediterranean (by Taco T. Terpstra), 251
Kennedy, D. F. (Ed.), Antiquity and the Meanings of Time: A Philosophy of Ancient and
Modern Literature (by Miriam Leonard), 338
Kerr, R. M., Latino-Punic Epigraphy: A Descriptive Study of the Inscriptions (by Jo Quinn),
305
Keulen, W. and U. Egelhaaf-Gaiser (Eds), Aspects of Apuleius’ Golden Ass. Vol. 3, The Isis
Book (by Regine May), 337
Kohn, T. D., The Dramaturgy of Senecan Tragedy (by Emma Buckley), 330
Laes, C., Children in the Roman Empire: Outsiders Within (by Ann-Cathrin Harders), 295
Lee, A. D., From Rome to Byzantium AD 363 to 565: The Transformation of Ancient Rome
(by Richard Flower), 344
Leone, A., The End of the Pagan City: Religion, Economy, and Urbanism in Late Antique
North Africa (by Gareth Sears), 363
Lehoux, D., A. D. Morrison and A. Sharrock (Eds), Lucretius: Poetry, Philosophy, Science
(by Barnaby Taylor), 317
Levine, L. I., Visual Judaism in Late Antiquity: Historical Contexts of Jewish Art (by Simon
Goldhill), 285
Magalhães de Oliveira, J. C., Potestas populi: participation populaire et action collective
dans les villes de l’Afrique romaine tardive (vers 300–430 apr. J.-C.) (by Robin
Whelan), 347
Manganaro, G., Pace e guerra nella Sicilia tardo-ellenistica e romana (215 A.C.–14 D.C.):
ricerche storiche e numismatiche (by Peter Morton), 272
Mattingly, D. J., Imperialism, Power, and Identity: Experiencing the Roman Empire (by
Louise Revell), 278
Mcgill, S., Plagiarism in Latin Literature (by Joseph A. Howley), 308
Mckenzie–Clark, J., Vesuvian Sigillata at Pompeii (by Victoria Leitch), 262
O’Daly, G. J. P., Days Linked by Song: Prudentius’ Cathemerinon (by Marc Mastrangelo),
360
Orton, C. and M. Hughes, Pottery in Archaeology (2nd edn) (by Astrid Van Oyen), 261
Parkes, R., Statius, Thebaid 4 / Edited with An Introduction, Translation, and Commentary
(by Helen Lovatt), 335
Pinto, J. A., Speaking Ruins. Piranesi, Architects and Antiquity in Eighteenth-Century Rome
(by Rosario Rovira Guardiola), 299
Pitzalis, F., La Volontà meno apparente: donne e società nell’Italia centrale tirrenica tra VIII
e VII A.C. (by Elisabeth Buchet), 244
Potter, D. S., Constantine the Emperor (by M. J. Edwards), 342
Priscien, Grammaire. Livres XIV, XV, XVI – les invariables (by Marcos Martinho), 306
Rebillard, É., Christians and their Many Identities in Late Antiquity, North Africa, 200–450
CE (by Robin Whelan), 347
Richard, J., Water for the City, Fountains for the People: Monumental Fountains in the
Roman East (by Brenda Longfellow), 266
Richardson, E., Classical Victorians: Scholars, Scoundrels and Generals in Pursuit of
Antiquity (by Richard Hingley), 300
Richardson, J. H., The Fabii and the Gauls. Studies in Historical Thought and
Historiography in Republican Rome (by Andrew C. Johnston), 270
Roberts, P., Life and Death in Pompeii and Herculaneum (by Ray Laurence), 259
Rowan, C., Under Divine Auspices. Divine Ideology and the Visualisation of Imperial Power
in the Severan Period (by Alexia Petsalis-Diomidis), 280
Rutledge, S. H., Ancient Rome as a Museum: Power, Identity, and the Culture of Collecting
(by Diana Spencer), 253
Scheid, J., Plutarch, Römische Fragen: ein Virtueller Spaziergang im Herzen des alten Rom
(by John Paulas), 256
Scheidel, W. (Ed.), The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Economy (by Claire Holleran),
290
Sharland, S., Horace in Dialogue: Bakhtinian Readings in the Satires (by Catherine
Schlegel), 321
Shaw, B. D., Sacred Violence. African Christians and Sectarian Hatred in the Age of
Augustine (by Nicholas J. Baker-Brian), 345
Sinisgalli, R., Perspective in the Visual Culture of Classical Antiquity (by Michael Squire),
269
Smith, C. and R. Covino (Eds), Praise and Blame in Roman Republican Rhetoric (by Luca
Grillo), 312
Stover, T., Epic and Empire in Vespasianic Rome: A New Reading of Valerius Flaccus’
Argonautica (by Andrew Zissos), 325
Temin, P., The Roman Market Economy (by Walter Scheidel), 293
Tol, G. W., A Fragmented History: A Methodological and Artefactual Approach to the Study
of Ancient Settlement in the Territories of Satricum and Antium (by Matthew J.
Mandich), 246
Turfa, J. M., Divining the Etruscan World: The Brontoscopic Calendar and Religious
Practice (by Nancy de Grummond), 239
van der Meer, L. B., Etrusco Ritu: Case Studies in Etruscan Ritual Behaviour (by Carrie Ann
Murray), 240
van Nuffelen, P., Orosius and the Rhetoric of History (by Matthew Kempshall), 362
Vout, C., The Hills of Rome: Signature of an Eternal City (by Mark Bradley), 255
von Reden, S., Money in Classical Antiquity (by Peter Fibiger Bang), 292
Ware, C., Claudian and the Roman Epic Tradition (by Scott McGill), 359
Wilcox, A., The Gift of Correspondence in Classical Rome: Friendship in Cicero’s Ad
Familiares and Seneca’s Moral Epistles (by Jonathan Mannering), 326
Williams, C. A., Reading Roman Friendship (by Miriam Griffin), 329
Williams, G. D., The Cosmic Viewpoint. A Study on Seneca’s Naturales Quaestiones (by
Francesca Romana Berno), 331
Wyke, M., Caesar in the USA (by Barbara Lawatsch Melton), 301
JRS 2014 ABSTRACTS
Federico Santangelo: Roman Politics in the 70s B.C.: A Story of Realignments?
This paper revisits the political history of the Roman Republic in the third decade of the first
century B.C. Its central contention is that the dominant feature of the period was neither a
reshuffle of alliances within the ‘Sullan’ senatorial nobility nor the swift demise of Sulla’s
legacy. Attention should be focused instead on some crucial policy issues which attracted
debate and controversy in that period: the powers of the tribunes, the corn supply of Rome,
the rôle of the Senate, the revival of the census, and the full inclusion of the Allies into the
citizen body. The political strategy of M. Aemilius Lepidus (cos. 78 B.C.) and its mediumterm repercussions also deserve close scrutiny in this connection.
Gregory S. Aldrete: Hammers, Axes, Bulls, and Blood: Some Practical Aspects of
Roman Animal Sacrifice
Animal sacrifice was a central component of ancient Roman religion, but scholars have
tended to focus on the symbolic aspects of these rituals, while glossing over the practical
challenges involved in killing large, potentially unruly creatures, such as bulls. The
traditional explanation is that the animal was struck on the head with a hammer or an axe to
stun it, then had its throat cut. Precisely how axes, hammers, and knives were employed
remains unexplained. This article draws upon ancient sculpture, comparative historical
sources, and animal physiology to argue that the standard interpretation is incomplete, and, in
its place, offers a detailed analysis of exactly how the killing and bleeding of bovines was
accomplished and the distinct purposes of hammers and axes within these rituals.
Jennifer Ingleheart: Play on the Proper Names of Individuals in the Catullan Corpus:
Wordplay, the Iambic Tradition, and the Late Republican Culture of Public
Abuse
The paper explores the significance of names and naming in Catullus. Catullus’ use of proper
names, and in particular his play on the connotations of the names of individuals who are
attacked within his poems, has not been fully explored to date, and the paper identifies
several examples of such play which have not previously been recognized. The paper
examines Catullan wordplay in the context of both the iambic tradition and the public abuse
culture of the late Roman Republic.
Alessandro Schiesaro: Materiam Superabat Opus: Lucretius Metamorphosed
Ovid’s narrative of Phaethon’s failed attempt prematurely to emulate his father in his unique
expertise can be read as a reflection on the virtues and limits of Lucretius’ philosophical
poetry. The paper suggests that, while he gives much credit to the De rerum natura’s literary
quality and its striving for the sublime, Ovid also critiques the hubristic connotations of
Lucretius’ rejection of divine authority and agency from the workings of nature. The second
part of the article explores how this particular version of the myth touches upon issues of
poetic authority, political positioning, and Oedipal competition.
Kirk Freudenburg: Recusatio as Political Theatre: Horace’s Letter to Augustus
Among the most potent devices that Roman emperors had at their disposal to disavow
autocratic aims and to put on display the consensus of ruler and ruled was the artful refusal of
exceptional powers, or recusatio imperii. The practice had a long history in Rome prior to the
reign of Augustus, but it was Augustus especially who, over the course of several decades,
perfected the recusatio as a means of performing his hesitancy towards power. The poets of
the Augustan period were similarly well practised in the art of refusal, writing dozens of
poetic recusationes that purported to refuse offers urged upon them by their patrons, or by the
greater expectations of the Augustan age, to take on projects. It is the purpose of this paper to
put the one type of refusal alongside the other, in order to show to what extent the refusals of
the Augustan poets are informed not just by aesthetic principles that derive, most obviously,
from Callimachus, but by the many, high-profile acts of denial that were performed as
political art by the emperor himself.
Peter Stacey: The Princely Republic
This article examines Seneca’s theory of monarchy in De clementia. It focuses in particular
on Seneca’s appropriation and redefinition of some key terms within Roman political thought
in order to present his theory as an account of the restitution of liberty to the res publica under
the government of the virtuous princeps. By relocating the Roman body politic to a Stoic
moral universe, Seneca is able to draw upon parts of his philosophical inheritance in order to
substantiate his claim in some depth.
Courtney Ann Roby: Seneca’s Scientific Fictions: Models as Fictions in the Natural
Questions
Seneca’s Naturales Quaestiones explains the causes and functional mechanisms of natural
phenomena, from common sights like rainbows to exotically out-of-reach ones like comets.
The vividness with which he brings them all within the reader’s grasp is certainly a literary
feat as much as a scientific one, but the rhetorical power of his explanations does not cost
them their epistemological validity. Analyses drawn from current philosophy of science
reveal elements of fictionality omnipresent in scientific models and experiments, suggesting
an approach to Seneca’s ‘scientific fictions’ not as failed analogies but as a sophisticated
expansion of the tradition of analogical scientific explanation.
Zoë M. Tan: Subversive Geography in Tacitus’ Germania
Geography is a fundamental element of ancient ethnography, yet the account of the
environment in Tacitus’ Germania is notably sparse. Standard elements of geographic
description are absent, or are presented in restricted (and subversive) ways. This paper
examines the presentation and structuring of Germanic spaces against a backdrop of
contrasting contemporary geographic writings, and considers the implications of Tacitus’
rejection of geographic norms.
Tristan Power: Suetonius’ Tacitus
This article discusses the relationship of Tacitus to his younger contemporary Suetonius,
challenging the view that Suetonius wrote a ‘supplement’ to the historian. Scholarly focus on
this pair has led to the widespread belief that Suetonius had read Tacitus’ Annals, which is
unsupported by the evidence. The prevailing consensus that the biographer may at times be
subtly criticizing the historian persists in commentaries on Suetonius’ Caesars. It is argued
that where their two accounts appear to meet, Suetonius is better seen as responding to the
earlier common source or sources, or distinguishing himself from the conventions of
historiography at large.