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This volume provides students with an introduction to a range of important problems in the study of ancient Rome during the Regal and Republican periods in one accessible collection, bringing together a diverse range of influential papers.
List of contents
Abbreviations; James H. Richardson and Federico Santangelo: Introduction; 1 Andrea Carandini: The Myth of Romulus and the Origins of Rome; 2 Michel Humm: Numa and Pythagoras: The Life and Death of a Myth; 3 Fausto Zevi: Demaratus and the 'Corinthian' Kings of Rome; 4 Ronald T. Ridley: The Enigma of Servius Tullius; 5 T. P. Wiseman: The Legend of Lucius Brutus; 6 Jan N. Bremmer: Three Roman Aetiological Myths; 7 Ettore Pais: The Fabii at the River Cremera and the Spartans at Thermopylae; 8 Emilio Gabba: Studies in Dionysius of Halicarnassus III: The Agrarian Bill of Spurius Cassius; 9 Michael H. Crawford: The Roman History of Roman Colonisation; 10 T. J. Cornell: The Lex Ouinia and the Emancipation of the Senate; 11 J.-C. Richard: Qualis pater, talis filius?; 12 Elizabeth Rawson: Cicero the Historian and Cicero the Antiquarian; 13 Harriet I. Flower: The Tradition of the Spolia Opima: M. Claudius Marcellus and Augustus; Bibliography; Acknowledgements
About the author
James H. Richardson is Lecturer in Classics at Massey University. He is the author of The Fabii and the Gauls: Studies in Historical Thought and Historiography in Republican Rome and various articles on Roman history.
Federico Santangelo is Lecturer in Ancient History at Newcastle University. He is a graduate of the University of Bologna and University College London. He has published on various aspects of Roman Republican history and is the author of Sulla, the Elites and the Empire: A Study of Roman Policies in Italy and the Greek East (2007) and Divination, Prediction and the End of the Roman Republic (2013).
Summary
This volume provides students with an introduction to a range of important problems in the study of ancient Rome during the Regal and Republican periods in one accessible collection, bringing together a diverse range of influential papers.
Additional text
the editors have done us a service in assembling and editing this collection, and I should recommend it to those wishing to familiarise or refamiliarise themselves with past and present trends and problems in the study of early Rome.