Many of the wars of the Late Republican period were largely civil conflicts, and there was thus a tension between the traditional expectation that triumphs should be celebrated for victories over foreign enemies and the need of the great commanders to give full expression to their prestige and charisma, and to legitimate their power. Most of the rules and conventions relating to triumphsthus appear to have been articulated as the development of Roman warfare brought new issues to the Senate’s attention. This paper will examine these tensions and the ways in which they were resolved. The traditional war-ritual of the triumph and the topic of civil war have both received renewed interest in recent scholarship. However, attempts to define the ...
War is competition on the grandest scale, and victory is the end product of competition. The winning...
The nature of Roman imperialism in the Republican period has been the subject of several recent work...
The triumphal procession staged Roman conquest and supremacy, featuring the defeated ‘other’ as oppo...
Many of the wars of the Late Republic were largely civil conflicts. There was, therefore, a tension ...
The Late Republic saw transformations of conventions across a wide rangeof political phenomena and r...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...
During the Republic the triumph was a medium for negotiating status and prestige within a highly com...
Modern scholarly discussion has concentrated on the question as to whether the Alban Mount triumph w...
This book is the first history of civil war in the later Roman Empire to be written in English. It a...
Our modern attempts to understand the aristocratic values of the Roman Republic have long held that ...
Given the intense competition among aristocrats seeking public office in the middle and late Roman R...
This chapter argues that although victory remained absolutely central to royal ideals and imagery, t...
In this paper, the scope of Roman attitudes towards warfare is examined through an analysis of Roman...
This paper examines an ancient Roman ceremony, the Triumph, and explains the effect this ritual had ...
The triumphus conferred great military prestige on generals and emperors. Exploiting that prestige f...
War is competition on the grandest scale, and victory is the end product of competition. The winning...
The nature of Roman imperialism in the Republican period has been the subject of several recent work...
The triumphal procession staged Roman conquest and supremacy, featuring the defeated ‘other’ as oppo...
Many of the wars of the Late Republic were largely civil conflicts. There was, therefore, a tension ...
The Late Republic saw transformations of conventions across a wide rangeof political phenomena and r...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...
During the Republic the triumph was a medium for negotiating status and prestige within a highly com...
Modern scholarly discussion has concentrated on the question as to whether the Alban Mount triumph w...
This book is the first history of civil war in the later Roman Empire to be written in English. It a...
Our modern attempts to understand the aristocratic values of the Roman Republic have long held that ...
Given the intense competition among aristocrats seeking public office in the middle and late Roman R...
This chapter argues that although victory remained absolutely central to royal ideals and imagery, t...
In this paper, the scope of Roman attitudes towards warfare is examined through an analysis of Roman...
This paper examines an ancient Roman ceremony, the Triumph, and explains the effect this ritual had ...
The triumphus conferred great military prestige on generals and emperors. Exploiting that prestige f...
War is competition on the grandest scale, and victory is the end product of competition. The winning...
The nature of Roman imperialism in the Republican period has been the subject of several recent work...
The triumphal procession staged Roman conquest and supremacy, featuring the defeated ‘other’ as oppo...