Short after the end of 312 a new word – tyrannus - was introduced in Roman political vocabulary. Making its first appearance in public monuments already in 313, this word was ‘invented’ , or rather resematicised, by the emperor or by his circle to label the emperor’s rival Maxentius. It was later employed for many others ‘bad’ emperors in late antiquity. In parallel with the appearance of this concept, we find for the first time an explicit, monumental celebration of the victory over the internal enemy, in Rome and later in Constantinople. The positive value of a victory over fellow citizens was never fully recognized, but Constantine’s innovation had a strong impact on imperial politics, ceremonials and on the definition of emperor’s r...
This article deals with self-representation of Maxentius, who ruled over Italy and North Africa betw...
The pontificatus maximus, one of Rome's main priesthoods, became an integral part of the emperor's a...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...
In the Roman Empire of the 3rd century crisis the title of princeps iuventus was born by: 1. caesare...
Following the chaotic third century, the new sole ruler, Constantine, was forced to re-think the ima...
Praise of an emperor’s virtues was the core of a panegyric. The range of qualities that could functi...
When civil war broke out in 68 CE, the succession of imperial candidates and the ensuing military ch...
Ancestry played a continuous role in the construction and portrayal of Roman emperorship in the firs...
This project focuses primarily on the Greek imperial panegyrics of the Roman Emperor Julian (r. 355-...
This article deals with self-representation of Maxentius, who ruled over Italy and North Africa betw...
This paper is an examination of the methods and utilizations of propaganda in the Late Republic/Earl...
The emperor Constantine has rightly been called the most important emperor of Late Antiquity. His po...
In 27 BC the Senate conferred the cognomen Augustus on C. Julius Caesar (Octavianus) for his renewal...
textThe Roman Emperor Trajan, who ruled the Roman Empire from 98 CE – 117 CE has always been remembe...
The Titles of Roman Emperors and the Idea of Victories over the Parthians and Persians in the Years ...
This article deals with self-representation of Maxentius, who ruled over Italy and North Africa betw...
The pontificatus maximus, one of Rome's main priesthoods, became an integral part of the emperor's a...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...
In the Roman Empire of the 3rd century crisis the title of princeps iuventus was born by: 1. caesare...
Following the chaotic third century, the new sole ruler, Constantine, was forced to re-think the ima...
Praise of an emperor’s virtues was the core of a panegyric. The range of qualities that could functi...
When civil war broke out in 68 CE, the succession of imperial candidates and the ensuing military ch...
Ancestry played a continuous role in the construction and portrayal of Roman emperorship in the firs...
This project focuses primarily on the Greek imperial panegyrics of the Roman Emperor Julian (r. 355-...
This article deals with self-representation of Maxentius, who ruled over Italy and North Africa betw...
This paper is an examination of the methods and utilizations of propaganda in the Late Republic/Earl...
The emperor Constantine has rightly been called the most important emperor of Late Antiquity. His po...
In 27 BC the Senate conferred the cognomen Augustus on C. Julius Caesar (Octavianus) for his renewal...
textThe Roman Emperor Trajan, who ruled the Roman Empire from 98 CE – 117 CE has always been remembe...
The Titles of Roman Emperors and the Idea of Victories over the Parthians and Persians in the Years ...
This article deals with self-representation of Maxentius, who ruled over Italy and North Africa betw...
The pontificatus maximus, one of Rome's main priesthoods, became an integral part of the emperor's a...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...