Remembering the Roman people : essays on late-Republican politics and literature
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Bibliographic Information
Remembering the Roman people : essays on late-Republican politics and literature
Oxford University Press, 2009
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [239]-253) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In the Roman republic, only the People could pass laws, only the People could elect politicians to office, and the very word republica meant 'the People's business'. So why is it always assumed that the republic was an oligarchy? The main reason is that most of what we know about it we know from Cicero, a great man and a great writer, but also an active right-wing politician who took it for granted that what was good for a small minority of self-styled 'best people'
(optimates) was good for the republic as a whole. T. P. Wiseman interprets the last century of the republic on the assumption that the People had a coherent political ideology of its own, and that the optimates, with their belief in justified murder, were responsible for the breakdown of the republic
in civil war.
Table of Contents
- 1. Roman History and the Ideological Vacuum
- 2. The Fall and Rise of Gaius Geta
- 3. Licinius Macer, Juno Moneta and Veiovis
- 4. Romulus' Rome of Equals
- 5. Macaulay on Cicero
- 6. Cicero and Varro
- 7. Marcopolis
- 8. The Political Stage
- 9. The Ethics of Murder
- 10. After the Ides of March
- Epilogue
by "Nielsen BookData"