Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii: From the Roman Empire to contemporary imperialism

The present book is the result of the conference 'Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii. From the Roman Empire to Contemporary Imperialism', held in Brussels at the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the Academia Belgica in Rome (September 11-13, 2014). At the heart of the conference was the 'reception', 'Nachleben' or 'permanence' of the Roman Empire, of an idea and a historical paradigm which since classical Antiquity has supported the most widespread claims to obtain and consolidate power. The volume's focus is on culture in a broad sense, i.e. including besides the arts, philosophy, religion and, most importantly, discourse. As such, a wide array of themes are subjected to academic scrutiny. Whereas the main focus is on Europe and North America, some contributors also reach out towards non-Western contexts, whether or not directly related to the Roman example. A theoretical and sociological dimension is also added thanks to the discussion on methodological issues. More specifically, the following question(s) receive particular attention: what is our position as researchers, embedded in a contemporary, often Western, democratic and capitalist context; what about the notion of empire itself, its constituent elements and the kind of ideological prerogatives to which it is generally subjected; in other words, apart from the many historical variants and instances of reception of empire, through which filters can, and inevitably do, we approach this topic? A question that has become ever more pregnant since the beginning of the twenty-first century, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the events of September 11, which have revivified what could be called American 'imperialism', and at a time when an essentially economic variant, driven by 'emerging' powers such as China, has increasingly contested existing power structures. In light of such meta-historical awareness, this book touches as much on the nature of the Roman Empire as it does on its historical legacy and, more importantly so, on who claims the latter inheritance throughout the most diverse epochs. By discussing some highly contrasting views upon this topic, participants explore issues that are of fundamental importance to the writing, not only of cultural history, but also of history itself.

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Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii: From the Roman Empire to contemporary imperialism

The present book is the result of the conference 'Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii. From the Roman Empire to Contemporary Imperialism', held in Brussels at the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the Academia Belgica in Rome (September 11-13, 2014). At the heart of the conference was the 'reception', 'Nachleben' or 'permanence' of the Roman Empire, of an idea and a historical paradigm which since classical Antiquity has supported the most widespread claims to obtain and consolidate power. The volume's focus is on culture in a broad sense, i.e. including besides the arts, philosophy, religion and, most importantly, discourse. As such, a wide array of themes are subjected to academic scrutiny. Whereas the main focus is on Europe and North America, some contributors also reach out towards non-Western contexts, whether or not directly related to the Roman example. A theoretical and sociological dimension is also added thanks to the discussion on methodological issues. More specifically, the following question(s) receive particular attention: what is our position as researchers, embedded in a contemporary, often Western, democratic and capitalist context; what about the notion of empire itself, its constituent elements and the kind of ideological prerogatives to which it is generally subjected; in other words, apart from the many historical variants and instances of reception of empire, through which filters can, and inevitably do, we approach this topic? A question that has become ever more pregnant since the beginning of the twenty-first century, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the events of September 11, which have revivified what could be called American 'imperialism', and at a time when an essentially economic variant, driven by 'emerging' powers such as China, has increasingly contested existing power structures. In light of such meta-historical awareness, this book touches as much on the nature of the Roman Empire as it does on its historical legacy and, more importantly so, on who claims the latter inheritance throughout the most diverse epochs. By discussing some highly contrasting views upon this topic, participants explore issues that are of fundamental importance to the writing, not only of cultural history, but also of history itself.

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Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii: From the Roman Empire to contemporary imperialism

Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii: From the Roman Empire to contemporary imperialism

Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii: From the Roman Empire to contemporary imperialism

Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii: From the Roman Empire to contemporary imperialism

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Overview

The present book is the result of the conference 'Renovatio, inventio, absentia imperii. From the Roman Empire to Contemporary Imperialism', held in Brussels at the occasion of the 75th anniversary of the Academia Belgica in Rome (September 11-13, 2014). At the heart of the conference was the 'reception', 'Nachleben' or 'permanence' of the Roman Empire, of an idea and a historical paradigm which since classical Antiquity has supported the most widespread claims to obtain and consolidate power. The volume's focus is on culture in a broad sense, i.e. including besides the arts, philosophy, religion and, most importantly, discourse. As such, a wide array of themes are subjected to academic scrutiny. Whereas the main focus is on Europe and North America, some contributors also reach out towards non-Western contexts, whether or not directly related to the Roman example. A theoretical and sociological dimension is also added thanks to the discussion on methodological issues. More specifically, the following question(s) receive particular attention: what is our position as researchers, embedded in a contemporary, often Western, democratic and capitalist context; what about the notion of empire itself, its constituent elements and the kind of ideological prerogatives to which it is generally subjected; in other words, apart from the many historical variants and instances of reception of empire, through which filters can, and inevitably do, we approach this topic? A question that has become ever more pregnant since the beginning of the twenty-first century, after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, the events of September 11, which have revivified what could be called American 'imperialism', and at a time when an essentially economic variant, driven by 'emerging' powers such as China, has increasingly contested existing power structures. In light of such meta-historical awareness, this book touches as much on the nature of the Roman Empire as it does on its historical legacy and, more importantly so, on who claims the latter inheritance throughout the most diverse epochs. By discussing some highly contrasting views upon this topic, participants explore issues that are of fundamental importance to the writing, not only of cultural history, but also of history itself.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789074461924
Publisher: Brepols Publishers
Publication date: 06/30/2018
Series: Etudes (Institut Historique belge de Rome) Series
Pages: 337
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.40(h) x 1.00(d)

Table of Contents

Empire and Imperialism throughout the Centuries. Reflections on a Historical exemplum. Introduction Wouter Bracke Jan Nelis Jan De Maeyer 1

Empires and other Polities. From the Roman Empire to the EU Wim Blockmans 13

An Indian Rome: Dialectics amidst Ruins Milinda Banerjee 29

The Roman Inheritance in British and Spanish America during the Age of Revolution Elise Bartosik-Vélez 51

Beyond Rome. The Polyvalent Usage and Levels of Meaning of Imperator and Imperium in Medieval Europe Christoph Mauntel 69

Imperial Republics: Roman Imagery in Italian and Dutch Town Halls, c. 1300-1700 Arthur Weststeijn 93

Rome as an Unlaid Ghost in Sixteenth-Eighteenth-Century Russia: Rome Spiritual and Rome Secular from the Early Sixteenth Century to 1725 Endre Sashalmi 117

Stabilitas Imperii: A Crucial Aspect of Political Thought in the Early and High Middle Ages Stefano Manganaro 137

A Rhetoric of Empire: Optimistic Pessimism and the Politics of Decline Eva Marlene Hausteiner 171

Translario Imperii Revisited in the Balkans: Interpretation of Serbian Past and Imperial Imagination, 1878-1941 Aleksandar Ignjatovic 191

A Second Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation? Rome and the Imperial Visions of Kaiser Wilhelm II Martin Kohirausch 215

A Contested Legacy. Conflicting Images of the Roman and British Empire in the Italian Imperialist Discourse through the Liberal and Fascist Era Laura Cerasi 239

Exempla virtutis imperialis: Roman Predicates for British Imperial Identity in the Eighteenth Century Stephen Caffey 261

Marching in Bloody Sandals and the Imagined Non-Empire. Wilhelm von Humboldt, Johann Gottfried Herder, and Karl Friedrich Schinkel on the Roman Empire, Classical Antiquity, and the German Future Felix Saure 281

Imperium Romanum. Grammaire d'un langage mythique Christophe Imbert 305

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