The Emperor's Retrospect: Augustus' Res Gestae in Epigraphy, Historiography and Commentary
The most famous of all Latin inscriptions is the Res Gestae divi Augusti ("the achievements of the late emperor Augustus"), published after his death at the entrance to his mausoleum in Rome, but known to us from various copies set up in the eastern provinces. It set out the things he most wanted to be remembered for from his first bid for power at the age of 19. The first copies were brought back to Europe in the sixteenth century, and the text has been a focus of scholarship ever since. This monograph tells the mostly neglected story of the recovery of the text over some four centuries, then the way modern scholars have attempted to understand it. It reveals that assessment has lacked insight to an alarming degree, and that many misunderstandings have become canonical. This study attempts to understand the text in its own terms, and test it against the author's own intentions - about both what is said and what is not said. The standard list of omissions turns out to be mostly mistaken, while many real omissions have not been signalled. The standard list of objections to the author's reliability often turns out to be highly defensive but defensible statements. The largest chapter, however, confronts the many cases where Augustus' statements can be directly challenged, despite the oft-repeated modern claim that he could not possibly tell a lie, because too many people knew the truth. These lies have generally been signalled before, but not previously assembled. The text is finally placed in the context of the Augustan age and its audience and the Augustan world view.
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The Emperor's Retrospect: Augustus' Res Gestae in Epigraphy, Historiography and Commentary
The most famous of all Latin inscriptions is the Res Gestae divi Augusti ("the achievements of the late emperor Augustus"), published after his death at the entrance to his mausoleum in Rome, but known to us from various copies set up in the eastern provinces. It set out the things he most wanted to be remembered for from his first bid for power at the age of 19. The first copies were brought back to Europe in the sixteenth century, and the text has been a focus of scholarship ever since. This monograph tells the mostly neglected story of the recovery of the text over some four centuries, then the way modern scholars have attempted to understand it. It reveals that assessment has lacked insight to an alarming degree, and that many misunderstandings have become canonical. This study attempts to understand the text in its own terms, and test it against the author's own intentions - about both what is said and what is not said. The standard list of omissions turns out to be mostly mistaken, while many real omissions have not been signalled. The standard list of objections to the author's reliability often turns out to be highly defensive but defensible statements. The largest chapter, however, confronts the many cases where Augustus' statements can be directly challenged, despite the oft-repeated modern claim that he could not possibly tell a lie, because too many people knew the truth. These lies have generally been signalled before, but not previously assembled. The text is finally placed in the context of the Augustan age and its audience and the Augustan world view.
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The Emperor's Retrospect: Augustus' Res Gestae in Epigraphy, Historiography and Commentary

The Emperor's Retrospect: Augustus' Res Gestae in Epigraphy, Historiography and Commentary

by RT Ridley
The Emperor's Retrospect: Augustus' Res Gestae in Epigraphy, Historiography and Commentary

The Emperor's Retrospect: Augustus' Res Gestae in Epigraphy, Historiography and Commentary

by RT Ridley

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Overview

The most famous of all Latin inscriptions is the Res Gestae divi Augusti ("the achievements of the late emperor Augustus"), published after his death at the entrance to his mausoleum in Rome, but known to us from various copies set up in the eastern provinces. It set out the things he most wanted to be remembered for from his first bid for power at the age of 19. The first copies were brought back to Europe in the sixteenth century, and the text has been a focus of scholarship ever since. This monograph tells the mostly neglected story of the recovery of the text over some four centuries, then the way modern scholars have attempted to understand it. It reveals that assessment has lacked insight to an alarming degree, and that many misunderstandings have become canonical. This study attempts to understand the text in its own terms, and test it against the author's own intentions - about both what is said and what is not said. The standard list of omissions turns out to be mostly mistaken, while many real omissions have not been signalled. The standard list of objections to the author's reliability often turns out to be highly defensive but defensible statements. The largest chapter, however, confronts the many cases where Augustus' statements can be directly challenged, despite the oft-repeated modern claim that he could not possibly tell a lie, because too many people knew the truth. These lies have generally been signalled before, but not previously assembled. The text is finally placed in the context of the Augustan age and its audience and the Augustan world view.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9789042913479
Publisher: Peeters Publishing
Publication date: 12/31/2003
Series: Studia Hellenistica , #39
Pages: 252
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.20(h) x 0.50(d)

Table of Contents

IntroductionIX
BibliographyXIII
Chapter 1.The recovery of the Res Gestae3
Chapter 2.The fate of the recovered text25
Chapter 3.Parallel texts51
Chapter 4.Omissions detected by moderns67
Chapter 5.Omissions indicated by the text itself95
Chapter 6.Difficult but defensible statements143
Chapter 7.Lies159
Summation229
Indexes243
Illustrations
Plates
1.The temple of Roma and Augustus at Ancyra4
2.The Latin text5
3.The mausoleum of Augustus at Rome13
4.The Prima Porta statue breastplate216
Figures
1.The plan of the temple of Roma and Augustus6
2.The Greek text at Apollonia22
3.The conquest of Dalmatia89
4.Strabo's vision of the oceanic contours of the world153
5.Phases in the occupation of Pannonia156
6.The Roman empire in 27 BC193
7.The Roman empire in AD 14194
8.The donations of Alexandria, 34212
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