Description

Book Synopsis

From the beginning, kings ruled Rome; Lucius Brutus established freedom and the consulship. So wrote the Roman historian Tacitus in the second century AD, but the view was orthodox. It is still widely accepted today.

But how could the Romans of later times have possibly known anything about the origins of Rome, the rule and subsequent expulsion of their kings or the creation of the Republic when all those events took place centuries before anyone wrote any account of them? And just how useful are those later accounts, those few that happen to survive, when the Romans not only viewed the past in light of the present but also retold stories of past events in ways designed to meet contemporary needs?

This book attempts to assess what the Romans wrote about the early development of their state. While it may not, in the end, be possible to say very much about archaic Rome, it is certainly possible to draw conclusions about later political ideas and their influence on what the Romans said about their past, about the writing of history at Rome and about the role that stories of past events could play even centuries later.



Table of Contents

Acknowledgements – Introduction – The People and the State in Early Rome – The King and the Constitution: Elections and Hereditary Succession in Regal Rome – The Oath per Iovem lapidem and the Community in Archaic Rome – Rome’s Treaties with Carthage: Jigsaw or Variant Traditions? – Ancient Historical Thought and the Development of the Consulship – The Roman Nobility, the Early Consular Fasti and the Consular Tribunate – ‘Firsts’ and the Historians of Rome – L. Iunius Brutus the Patrician and the Political Allegiance of Q. Aelius Tubero – Bibliography – Index.

Kings and Consuls: Eight Essays on Roman History,

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    A Paperback / softback by James Richardson

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      Publisher: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
      Publication Date: 15/06/2020
      ISBN13: 9781789973860, 978-1789973860
      ISBN10: 1789973864

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      From the beginning, kings ruled Rome; Lucius Brutus established freedom and the consulship. So wrote the Roman historian Tacitus in the second century AD, but the view was orthodox. It is still widely accepted today.

      But how could the Romans of later times have possibly known anything about the origins of Rome, the rule and subsequent expulsion of their kings or the creation of the Republic when all those events took place centuries before anyone wrote any account of them? And just how useful are those later accounts, those few that happen to survive, when the Romans not only viewed the past in light of the present but also retold stories of past events in ways designed to meet contemporary needs?

      This book attempts to assess what the Romans wrote about the early development of their state. While it may not, in the end, be possible to say very much about archaic Rome, it is certainly possible to draw conclusions about later political ideas and their influence on what the Romans said about their past, about the writing of history at Rome and about the role that stories of past events could play even centuries later.



      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements – Introduction – The People and the State in Early Rome – The King and the Constitution: Elections and Hereditary Succession in Regal Rome – The Oath per Iovem lapidem and the Community in Archaic Rome – Rome’s Treaties with Carthage: Jigsaw or Variant Traditions? – Ancient Historical Thought and the Development of the Consulship – The Roman Nobility, the Early Consular Fasti and the Consular Tribunate – ‘Firsts’ and the Historians of Rome – L. Iunius Brutus the Patrician and the Political Allegiance of Q. Aelius Tubero – Bibliography – Index.

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