Predicting the future is contentious. In the fourth century competing claimants tried to define who could consult the signs and interpret them. Ammianus' use of future signs in his history, especially in the Julianic books, responds to this contemporary debate. His Julian interprets them correctly in his struggles with Constantius II but then fails to do so during his disastrous Persian campaign. Future signs continue to feature in the narrative after Julian's death. This article argues that Ammianus' abundant use of future signs is a distinct feature of his work that should be read in a late fourth century context
This chapter examines how, by means of a carefully constructed narrative, the fourth-century Latin h...
This article offers a new argument defending the traditional identification of the Strategius named ...
Item does not contain fulltextAmmianus Marcellinus' excursus on the Huns and Alans in the thirty-fir...
At the end of book twenty of his Res Gestae Ammianus Marcellinus depicts an abundance of rainbows ab...
Offers a major reinterpretation of Ammianus' Res Gestae, drawing on detailed analysis of his depicti...
Although the emperor Julian appears as the dominant character within the extant portion of Ammianus ...
By the late fourth century the seat of imperial power had moved from Rome. Emperors, in fact, seldom...
The present Ph.D. deals with two chapters taken from the Res gestae by the Greek historiographer Amm...
Dealing with medieval theology one cannot but take into account the theories of sign and text interp...
The fourth-century historian Ammianus Marcellinus famously attacks the inhabitants of Rome in two sa...
This study of the last pagan Roman emperor provides remarkable insight into the man and his times. ...
In 359 CE Constantius II appointed investigators into the fall of Amida, who confronted Ursicinus, a...
Scholars have not paid much attention to the reign of Jovian (363–364) and the appreciation of his b...
This article deals with the Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus’ famous description of the emperor ...
In his Res gestae, Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus relates Roman battles and interactions with ...
This chapter examines how, by means of a carefully constructed narrative, the fourth-century Latin h...
This article offers a new argument defending the traditional identification of the Strategius named ...
Item does not contain fulltextAmmianus Marcellinus' excursus on the Huns and Alans in the thirty-fir...
At the end of book twenty of his Res Gestae Ammianus Marcellinus depicts an abundance of rainbows ab...
Offers a major reinterpretation of Ammianus' Res Gestae, drawing on detailed analysis of his depicti...
Although the emperor Julian appears as the dominant character within the extant portion of Ammianus ...
By the late fourth century the seat of imperial power had moved from Rome. Emperors, in fact, seldom...
The present Ph.D. deals with two chapters taken from the Res gestae by the Greek historiographer Amm...
Dealing with medieval theology one cannot but take into account the theories of sign and text interp...
The fourth-century historian Ammianus Marcellinus famously attacks the inhabitants of Rome in two sa...
This study of the last pagan Roman emperor provides remarkable insight into the man and his times. ...
In 359 CE Constantius II appointed investigators into the fall of Amida, who confronted Ursicinus, a...
Scholars have not paid much attention to the reign of Jovian (363–364) and the appreciation of his b...
This article deals with the Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus’ famous description of the emperor ...
In his Res gestae, Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus relates Roman battles and interactions with ...
This chapter examines how, by means of a carefully constructed narrative, the fourth-century Latin h...
This article offers a new argument defending the traditional identification of the Strategius named ...
Item does not contain fulltextAmmianus Marcellinus' excursus on the Huns and Alans in the thirty-fir...