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Series Information: Roman Imperial Biographies
In this, the only biography of Septimius Severus in English, Anthony R. Birley explors how 'Roman' or otherwise this man was and examines his remarkable background and career. Severus was descended from Phoenician settlers in Tripolitania, and his reign, AD 193-211, represents a key point in Roman history. Birley explores what was African and what was Roman in Septimius' background, given that he came from an African city. He asks whether Septimius was a 'typical cosmopolitan bureaucrat', a 'new Hannibal on the throne of Caesar' or 'principle author of the decline of the Roman Empire'? eBook available with sample pages: 0203028597
Marcus Aurelius, the philosopher-emperor who ruled the Roman Empire
between AD 161 and 180, is one of the best recorded individuals
from antiquity. Even his face became more than usually familiar:
the imperial coinage displayed his portrait for over 40 years, from
the clean-shaven young heir of Antonius to the war-weary, heavily
bearded ruler who died at his post in his late fifties. His
correspondence with his tutor Fronto, and even more the private
notebook he kept for his last ten years, the Meditations, provides
a unique series of vivid and revealing glimpses into the character
and peoccupations of this emporer who spent many years in terrible
wars against northern tribes. In this accessible and scholarly
study, Professor Birley paints a portrait of an emporer who was
human and just - an embodiment of the pagan virtues of Rome.
In this, the only biography of Septimius Severus in English,
Anthony R. Birley explors how 'Roman' or otherwise this man was and
examines his remarkable background and career. Severus was
descended from Phoenician settlers in Tripolitania, and his reign,
AD 193-211, represents a key point in Roman history. Birley
explores what was African and what was Roman in Septimius'
background, given that he came from an African city. He asks
whether Septimius was a 'typical cosmopolitan bureaucrat', a 'new
Hannibal on the throne of Caesar' or 'principle author of the
decline of the Roman Empire'?
The Roman Government of Britain is a completely rewritten version
of Professor Birley's Fasti of Roman Britain (1981), with
biographical entries for all higher officials from AD 43 to 409.
Several new governors, legionary legates, tribunes, procurators,
and fleet prefects are included, and the entries for those
previously known revised; and in this edition translations of all
sources have been added. Introductory sections deal with career
structures in the principate and the changed system of the late
empire. Evidence for imperial visits is also quoted and discussed.
The work provides a full conspectus of all the literary,
epigraphic, and numismatic sources for the history of Roman rule in
Britain.
Hadrian's reign (AD 117-138) was a watershed in the history of the Roman Empire. Hadrian abandoned his predecessor Trajan's eastern conquests - Mesopotamia and Armenia - trimmed down the lands beyond the lower Danube, and constructed new demarcation lines in Germany, North Africa, and most famously Hadrian's Wall in Britain, to delimit the empire. The emperor Hadrian, a strange and baffling figure to his contemporaries, had a many-sided personality. Insatiably ambitious, and a passionate Philhellene, he promoted the 'Greek Renaissance' extravagantly. But his attempt to Hellenize the Jews, including the outlawing of circumcision, had disastrous consequences, and his 'Greek' love of the beautiful Bithynian boy Antinous ended in tragedy. No comprehensive account of Hadrian's life and reign has been attempted for over seventy years. In Hadrian: The Restless Emperor, Anthony Birley brings together the new evidence from inscriptions and papyri, and up-to-date and in-depth examination of the work of other scholars on aspects of Hadrian's reign and policies such as the Jewish war, the coinage, Hadrian's building programme in Rome, Athens and Tivoli, and his relationship with his favourite, Antinous, to provide a thorough and fascinating account of the private and public life of a man who, though hated when he died, left an indelible mark on the Roman Empire.
Marcus Aurelius, the philosopher-emperor who ruled the Roman Empire between AD 161 and 180, is one of the best recorded individuals from antiquity. Even his face became more than usually familiar: the imperial coinage displayed his portrait for over 40 years, from the clean-shaven young heir of Antonius to the war-weary, heavily bearded ruler who died at his post in his late fifties. His correspondence with his tutor Fronto, and even more the private notebook he kept for his last ten years, the Meditations, provides a unique series of vivid and revealing glimpses into the character and peoccupations of this emporer who spent many years in terrible wars against northern tribes. In this accessible and scholarly study, Professor Birley paints a portrait of an emporer who was human and just - an embodiment of the pagan virtues of Rome. eBook available with sample pages: 0203137590
No historian of ancient Rome in this century has had a greater
influence on historical research or won greater international
acclaim than Sir Ronald Syne (1903-89). His outstanding position
was due mainly to his first two books, The Roman Revolution, which
appeared in 1939, and Tacitus (two volumes, 1958) - although he
went on to produce many more monographs, and seven volumes of his
Roman Papers have so far appeared. The long gap between his first
two books is partly explained by the war, which took him on
official duties to Belgrade and Ankara; and he spent the years
1943-5 at Istanbul as Professor of Classical Philology. It was
known that in spite of the war, Syme had continued to write in
these years, in particular `Strabonia', investigations into the
famous ancient Geography composed by Strabo, a native of Asia Minor
in the time of Augustus. After Syme's death, the manuscript was
discovered among his papers: he had not quite completed the work,
but what he had written, with almost complete annotation,
represents a substantial and fascinating study of the historical
geography of Anatolia in the Hellenistic and early Roman period.
Syme ruthlessly dissects the often incoherent and inconsistent text
of Strabo, at the same time providing rich detail on client kings,
Roman generals and emperors, writers and travellers. Above all, he
shows unequalled ability to understand the landscape and settlement
of Anatolia; and the work is composed in the same forceful and
elegant style that made his other books classics of historical
literature.
Sir Ronald Syme has been a major figure in classical studies for
almost half a century, and this final volume contains his most
recent papers. Syme offers insightful discussions of ancient
authors such as the younger Pliny and Tacitus, and also sheds much
new light on the classical Roman age's important political events
and figures.
Shortly before his death in September 1989, Sir Ronald Syme
approved the selection and publication of these fifty-nine papers.
Volume VI, composed of previously published articles and reviews,
offers a splendid cross-section of Syme's interests: the Roman
revolution; the Augustan aristocracy; Tacitus and Sallust;
historical geography; the Roman army; a variety of classical
authors (Horace, Ovid, Strabo, Seneca, Justin, the Historia
Augusta); the Emperor Hadrian; colonial elites; historiography,
ancient and modern; and Roman political thought and society. Volume
VII consists of twelve unpublished papers (originally intended to
form part of a separate book, `Pliny and Italia Transpadana'), in
which the two Plinies and their age are put under searching
scrutiny. It is rounded off by a Latin text purporting to derive
from a lost book of Tacitus' Histories (duly equipped with
commentary); and by an Index to both volumes.
Before his death in late 1989, Sir Ronald Syme approved the
publication of these 59 papers on Roman history which complete this
collection of his life's work. Volume VI covers such varied topics
as "Human Rights and Social Status at Rome", "Marriage Ages for
Roman Senators", "Oligarchy at Rome: A Paradigm for Political
Science", "Military Geography at Rome", "Diet on Capri ", "A Dozen
Early Priesthoods", and "Some Unrecognized Authors from Spain ".
Volume VII contains solely later, unpublished work which was still
in manuscript form at the time of Sir Ronald's death. The final
item is a spoof on Tacitus, comprising a Latin text on the story of
Titus and Berenice with historical commentary. The work is aimed at
scholars and students of Roman history, Roman literature, Roman
philosophy, and classics.
Volumes Iv and V of Roman Papers contain forty-two of Sir Ronald
Syme's papers composed between 1981 and 1985. A good many deal with
the younger Pliny and Tacitus; other ancient authors examined here
include Strabo, the elder Pliny, Statius, Quintilian, and Arrian.
Several papers focus on the Spanish provinces and on the Greek
east. New light is shed on the 'Hispano-Narbonensian nexus' that
emerged under the Flavians and was to form the Antonine dynasty, on
the emperor Hadrian and his Antonine successors, and on the usurper
Avidius Cassius. There is an Index of Persons for the two volumes
at the end of Roman Papers V.
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