Buch, Englisch, Band 10, 464 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 798 g
Methods and Approaches
Buch, Englisch, Band 10, 464 Seiten, Format (B × H): 155 mm x 236 mm, Gewicht: 798 g
Reihe: Historiography of Rome and Its Empire
ISBN: 978-90-04-46148-2
Verlag: Brill
This volume focuses on Cassius Dio as a historian – the only historian who allows us to follow the developments of Rome’s political institutions during a more than thousand year period, from the foundation of the city to Cassius Dio’s retirement from public life in 229 CE. The volume explores the Roman historian’s methodology and agendas, all of which influenced his approaches to Rome’s history. It offers a reassessment that rests on a deeper study of his relationship with historiographical traditions as well as his narrative and structural approach to Roman history. It examines Cassius Dio as both a writer in the historiographic tradition with his own agenda for writing The Roman History and a historian with his own ambition to tell the history of Rome.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Notes on Contributors
Historiography of Rome and Its Empire Series
Carsten H. Lange and Jesper M. Madsen
Introduction: Cassius Dio, Politician and Historian
Jesper M. Madsen and Carsten H. Lange
1 Cassius Dio Scholarship in the 20th & 21st Centuries
Valérie Fromentin
Part 1: Methodology
2 Exploiting Conventions: Cassius Dio’s Late Republic and the Annalistic Tradition
Mads O. Lindholmer
3 The Dog That Did Not Bark? Cassius Dio and Herodotus
Christopher Baron
4 Cassius Dio’s Periodization of Roman History and His Methodological Agendas
Konstantin V. Markov
5 The Revolt of the Pannonian Legions and the Working Method of Cassius Dio
Josip Parat
6 Cassius Dio the Orator: Approaches to Rhetoric in the Roman History, Books 1–53
Christopher Burden-Strevens
Part 2: Writing Contemporary History
7 Avoiding the Eastern Question: Avidius Cassius and the Antonine Succession in Cassius Dio
Adam M. Kemezis
8 Historiographic Method and Self-Presentation in Cassius Dio’s Contemporary History
Andrew G. Scott
9 Between Eyewitness Reports and the Writing of History: Cassius Dio’s Potential as an Historian
Jesper M. Madsen
10 The Severan Sejanus? Parallels between Plautianus and Sejanus in Cassius Dio
Alex Imrie
11 Wizards and Sorcerers: Cassius Dio on Caracalla and Cicero
Graham Andrews
part 3: Approaches to Politics and War
12 From Caution to Elitism: Cassius Dio’s Approach to Foreign Policy
Eric Adler
13 Cassius Dio on Perusia: A Study in Human Nature During Civil War
Carsten H. Lange
14 Nero’s Gloomy Triumph: Cassius Dio and Senatorial Identity
Antonio Pistellato
15 Cassius Dio’s Roman Economic History
Jesper Carlsen
16 Teuta and Feminine Exemplarity in Cassius Dio’s Roman History
Brandon Jones
17 Cassius Dio and the Dowager Empresses, Part 1: Livia, the Senate, and the Succession Struggle
Julie Langford
Index