The cityscape of ancient Rome was filled with opulent buildings that created armatures— fluid, connective thoroughfares throughout the city. These armatures came together to form narrative pathways. The triumphal route, the memorialized, celebratory course of victorious generals, is one such narrative pathway. Among other strategies to legitimize his sole rule, Augustus constructed a self-promoting armature along the triumphal route, thereby linking him with the triumph. This paper examines how the construction of the Augustan armature along the triumphal route promoted Augustus and how the Flavians responded to it in advertising their own legitimacy in the wake of a civil war. Advisor: Beth Severy-Hoven Classics Departmen
The idea of an `Augustan discourse' represents a valuable step forward from the twentieth-century be...
This truly monumental book stems from the author’s doctoral thesis completed in 1993 at Oxford, and ...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...
This course provides a detailed examination of the life and administration of the Roman emperor Augu...
This thesis examines the building projects undertaken under the auspices of the emperors within the ...
In 70 C.E., the general Vespasian became the emperor of the Roman world. His accession marked the en...
Via Appia, the oldest Roman road, called „the queen of all roads” in ancient times, was built in 312...
This paper examines an ancient Roman ceremony, the Triumph, and explains the effect this ritual had ...
It has become axiomatic in modern scholarship that the city of ancient Rome functioned as a text, wi...
In the "Aeneid," Vergil dramatically announces through the character of Anchises that Caesar Augustu...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-03This dissertation explores the intersection between...
The triumph was the most prestigious accolade a politician and general could receive in republican R...
The Tropaeum Traiani was one of two trophy monuments known to be erected on foreign soil since the t...
Augustus' propaganda founded the ruler's power on a series of references to the sky: Caesar's comet,...
textThis dissertation studies five Roman emperors––Augustus, Domitian, Antoninus Pius, Septimius Se...
The idea of an `Augustan discourse' represents a valuable step forward from the twentieth-century be...
This truly monumental book stems from the author’s doctoral thesis completed in 1993 at Oxford, and ...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...
This course provides a detailed examination of the life and administration of the Roman emperor Augu...
This thesis examines the building projects undertaken under the auspices of the emperors within the ...
In 70 C.E., the general Vespasian became the emperor of the Roman world. His accession marked the en...
Via Appia, the oldest Roman road, called „the queen of all roads” in ancient times, was built in 312...
This paper examines an ancient Roman ceremony, the Triumph, and explains the effect this ritual had ...
It has become axiomatic in modern scholarship that the city of ancient Rome functioned as a text, wi...
In the "Aeneid," Vergil dramatically announces through the character of Anchises that Caesar Augustu...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Washington, 2017-03This dissertation explores the intersection between...
The triumph was the most prestigious accolade a politician and general could receive in republican R...
The Tropaeum Traiani was one of two trophy monuments known to be erected on foreign soil since the t...
Augustus' propaganda founded the ruler's power on a series of references to the sky: Caesar's comet,...
textThis dissertation studies five Roman emperors––Augustus, Domitian, Antoninus Pius, Septimius Se...
The idea of an `Augustan discourse' represents a valuable step forward from the twentieth-century be...
This truly monumental book stems from the author’s doctoral thesis completed in 1993 at Oxford, and ...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...