This dissertation explores Tacitus' use of minor characters in Annals I-VI through an in-depth examination of three exemplary series of minor individuals: (1) In Chapter I, the series of female characters deliberately portrayed as parallel to Agrippina Maior. Tacitus juxtaposed and made analogues of the wife of Arminius, Plancina and Livilla. Because they are presented as analogous to Agrippina the Elder, the reader applies comments, inferences and conclusions about these women to Agrippina. This nexus of minor female characters is central to an underst and ing of Tacitus' portrait of Germanicus' wife. (2) In Chapter II, two series of episodes in which canonical annalistic elements, the obituary and the account of res externae, are used by ...
Tacitus’ treatment of the Battle of Teutoburg Forest in Annals 1.61-62 is a graphic and gruesome acc...
The dissertation offers a detailed study of the historian Tacitus' treatment of wealth, enrichment a...
At Annals 1.10.5, Tacitus offers a stylish trio of features that he claims were cited by Augustus’ d...
Scholarship has recognised Tacitus’ preoccupation with characterand his use of rhetorical stereotype...
Tacitus’ portrayal of Agrippina Minor Ancient historiography has more in common with the historical ...
This dissertation investigates the divergence between the portrayal of imperial women in dynastic im...
This dissertation purported to demonstrate how Tacitus\u27 recording of events in the Historiae and ...
This thesis considers the geographical and chronological forms of ‘mirroring’ that offer a way of re...
The Roman historian Tacitus is not only our most important source for the Early Roman Empire, but al...
Tacitus’ Annales recounts the lives, reigns, and intrigues of the first ruling dynasty of Rome, from...
Tacitus' selection and treatment of reported speech in the Annals differed intentionally from establ...
Book XVI of Tacitus\u27 Annals is the last of the surviving books of the great Roman historian\u27s ...
Book XVI of Tacitus\u27 Annals is the last of the surviving books of the great Roman historian\u27s ...
The dissertation examines Suetonius' ideals of feminine conduct by exploring the behaviors he lauds ...
The dissertation offers a detailed study of the historian Tacitus' treatment of wealth, enrichment a...
Tacitus’ treatment of the Battle of Teutoburg Forest in Annals 1.61-62 is a graphic and gruesome acc...
The dissertation offers a detailed study of the historian Tacitus' treatment of wealth, enrichment a...
At Annals 1.10.5, Tacitus offers a stylish trio of features that he claims were cited by Augustus’ d...
Scholarship has recognised Tacitus’ preoccupation with characterand his use of rhetorical stereotype...
Tacitus’ portrayal of Agrippina Minor Ancient historiography has more in common with the historical ...
This dissertation investigates the divergence between the portrayal of imperial women in dynastic im...
This dissertation purported to demonstrate how Tacitus\u27 recording of events in the Historiae and ...
This thesis considers the geographical and chronological forms of ‘mirroring’ that offer a way of re...
The Roman historian Tacitus is not only our most important source for the Early Roman Empire, but al...
Tacitus’ Annales recounts the lives, reigns, and intrigues of the first ruling dynasty of Rome, from...
Tacitus' selection and treatment of reported speech in the Annals differed intentionally from establ...
Book XVI of Tacitus\u27 Annals is the last of the surviving books of the great Roman historian\u27s ...
Book XVI of Tacitus\u27 Annals is the last of the surviving books of the great Roman historian\u27s ...
The dissertation examines Suetonius' ideals of feminine conduct by exploring the behaviors he lauds ...
The dissertation offers a detailed study of the historian Tacitus' treatment of wealth, enrichment a...
Tacitus’ treatment of the Battle of Teutoburg Forest in Annals 1.61-62 is a graphic and gruesome acc...
The dissertation offers a detailed study of the historian Tacitus' treatment of wealth, enrichment a...
At Annals 1.10.5, Tacitus offers a stylish trio of features that he claims were cited by Augustus’ d...