During the Republic the triumph was a medium for negotiating status and prestige within a highly competitive aristocratic society, whereas during the Principate it was a medium for negotiating status and prestige under a monarchy. This chapter argues that Cassius Dio approached triumphal matters in his historical narrative in a way very similar to the parallel evidence: he understood, at times disapprovingly, the inherent flexibility of the ius triumphandi; yet he also drew attention to divergences from customary procedure, particularly when symptomatic of political disorder in periods of staseis and dynasteiai. There were rules and regulations for granting triumphs, but at the same time there was flexibility, mainly in terms of political s...
In 29 B.C., after his victories over Marcus Antonius (cos. 44, 34) and Cleopatra at Actium and in Eg...
Comparing legitimacy in the three different contexts of literaryleisteia, Late Republican civil war ...
This thesis proposes that the gratulatory supplication, an essentialy religious phenomenon, had the ...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...
The Late Republic saw transformations of conventions across a wide rangeof political phenomena and r...
In this paper, I explore Cassius Dio’s use of his speeches as a means of historical explanation. Fro...
Many of the wars of the Late Republican period were largely civil conflicts, and there was thus a te...
Many of the wars of the Late Republic were largely civil conflicts. There was, therefore, a tension ...
The transformation of the Roman political system in the first century BCE had led to a corresponding...
The story of how parrhêsia (“freedom of speech” or “frank speech”) went from a political liberty und...
Modern scholarly discussion has concentrated on the question as to whether the Alban Mount triumph w...
The triumphal procession staged Roman conquest and supremacy, featuring the defeated ‘other’ as oppo...
This thesis builds on recent scholarship on Dio’s φύσις model to argue that Dio’s view of the fall o...
My PhD analyses the imperial “admission” (the so-called “salutatio” and “adoratio”) from the Severan...
This article sets out to identify the links between triumphal chariots and emperor worship during th...
In 29 B.C., after his victories over Marcus Antonius (cos. 44, 34) and Cleopatra at Actium and in Eg...
Comparing legitimacy in the three different contexts of literaryleisteia, Late Republican civil war ...
This thesis proposes that the gratulatory supplication, an essentialy religious phenomenon, had the ...
The Romans had an expectation that every new initiative, and indeed every war, would end in victory,...
The Late Republic saw transformations of conventions across a wide rangeof political phenomena and r...
In this paper, I explore Cassius Dio’s use of his speeches as a means of historical explanation. Fro...
Many of the wars of the Late Republican period were largely civil conflicts, and there was thus a te...
Many of the wars of the Late Republic were largely civil conflicts. There was, therefore, a tension ...
The transformation of the Roman political system in the first century BCE had led to a corresponding...
The story of how parrhêsia (“freedom of speech” or “frank speech”) went from a political liberty und...
Modern scholarly discussion has concentrated on the question as to whether the Alban Mount triumph w...
The triumphal procession staged Roman conquest and supremacy, featuring the defeated ‘other’ as oppo...
This thesis builds on recent scholarship on Dio’s φύσις model to argue that Dio’s view of the fall o...
My PhD analyses the imperial “admission” (the so-called “salutatio” and “adoratio”) from the Severan...
This article sets out to identify the links between triumphal chariots and emperor worship during th...
In 29 B.C., after his victories over Marcus Antonius (cos. 44, 34) and Cleopatra at Actium and in Eg...
Comparing legitimacy in the three different contexts of literaryleisteia, Late Republican civil war ...
This thesis proposes that the gratulatory supplication, an essentialy religious phenomenon, had the ...