In this interdisciplinary volume, a team of classicists, historians, and archaeologists examines how the memory of the infamous emperor Nero was negotiated in different contexts and by different people during the ensuing Flavian age of imperial Rome. The contributions show different Flavian responses to Nero’s complicated legacy: while some aspects of his memory were reinforced, others were erased. Emphasizing the constant and diverse nature of this negotiation, this book proposes a nuanced interpretation of both the Flavian age itself and its relation to Nero’s Rome. By combining the study of these strategies with architectural approaches, archaeology, and memory studies, this volume offers a multifaceted picture of Roman civilization at a...
This article reconsiders the identification of several imperial personages and personifications from...
This edited collection, the product of a 2014 conference at Notre Dame's Rome Global Gateway, asks "...
The contribution investigates the references of the ghost of Iulius Caesar in Florus II 16, with the...
In this interdisciplinary volume, a team of classicists, historians, and archaeologists examines how...
In this interdisciplinary volume, a team of classicists, historians, and archaeologists examines how...
Emperor Nero was the last of the four Julio-Claudian emperors and has been considered to be one of w...
In their contributions, the scholars take different methodological approaches to varying types of ev...
This dissertation examines how the Republican past was remembered and recreated under the Flavian er...
Spanning the time from the 1st century BCE to the 400s CE, this volume highlights the multifaceted i...
This contribution has two aims. The first is to systematically refute E. Courtney’s argumentation th...
In 70 C.E., the general Vespasian became the emperor of the Roman world. His accession marked the en...
In AD 431 a statue of the senator Virius Nicomachus Flavianus was erected in Trajanâs Forum at Rome....
Contains fulltext : 134614.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Within the disc...
PhD ThesisThis inter-disciplinary thesis traces the influence of Greek images of monarchy on Rome, ...
Thanks to a generous donation by Ms. Joan Law, the Museum of Classical Archaeology has been ab...
This article reconsiders the identification of several imperial personages and personifications from...
This edited collection, the product of a 2014 conference at Notre Dame's Rome Global Gateway, asks "...
The contribution investigates the references of the ghost of Iulius Caesar in Florus II 16, with the...
In this interdisciplinary volume, a team of classicists, historians, and archaeologists examines how...
In this interdisciplinary volume, a team of classicists, historians, and archaeologists examines how...
Emperor Nero was the last of the four Julio-Claudian emperors and has been considered to be one of w...
In their contributions, the scholars take different methodological approaches to varying types of ev...
This dissertation examines how the Republican past was remembered and recreated under the Flavian er...
Spanning the time from the 1st century BCE to the 400s CE, this volume highlights the multifaceted i...
This contribution has two aims. The first is to systematically refute E. Courtney’s argumentation th...
In 70 C.E., the general Vespasian became the emperor of the Roman world. His accession marked the en...
In AD 431 a statue of the senator Virius Nicomachus Flavianus was erected in Trajanâs Forum at Rome....
Contains fulltext : 134614.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Within the disc...
PhD ThesisThis inter-disciplinary thesis traces the influence of Greek images of monarchy on Rome, ...
Thanks to a generous donation by Ms. Joan Law, the Museum of Classical Archaeology has been ab...
This article reconsiders the identification of several imperial personages and personifications from...
This edited collection, the product of a 2014 conference at Notre Dame's Rome Global Gateway, asks "...
The contribution investigates the references of the ghost of Iulius Caesar in Florus II 16, with the...