Claudian’S Last Panegyric And Imperial Visits To Rome
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Claudian’s Last Panegyric and Imperial Visits to Rome Bookmark by Gavin Kelly 6 Late Antiquity, Claudian, Late Roman Empire, Claudius Claudianus „The First Book of Symmachus‘ Correspondence as a Separate Collection“, in P.F. Moretti, R. Ricci, and C. Torre (eds) Culture and Literature in Latin Late Antiquity (Brepols, 2016), 197-220 Bookmark Claudian’s Last Panegyric and Imperial Visits to Rome Edit Review of J. den Boeft, J.W. Drijvers, D. den Hengst, and H.C. Teitler, Philological and Historical Commentary on Ammianus Marcellinus XXIX (2013) DownloadEdit Ammianus‘ Greek Accent DownloadEdit The Political Crisis of AD 375/376 DownloadEdit Sidonius and Claudian DownloadEdit Pliny Kelly 2016 = G. Kelly, Claudian’s Last Panegyric and Imperial Visits to Rome, CQ 66 (1), 2016, 336-357. VOCI DI ENCICLOPEDIE E REPERTORI: von Rohden 1895 = P. von Rohden, Arrecinus (1), in RE II, 1, 1895, col. 1226.
Summary The article analyses Claudian’s Panegyric for Honorius‘ Sixth Consulship, a poem celebrating the end of the conflicts that troubled the Western Roman Empire, and particularly Gildo’s rebellion and the war against the Goths. This study examines how Claudian presents an image of restored peace despite ongoing troubles. The article explores the literary and stylistic Professor of Latin Literature and Roman History, University of Edinburgh 在 ed.ac.uk 的电子邮件经过验证 – 首页 Latin literature Roman history Late Antiquity Classics Latin 文章 引用次数 合著作者
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Claudian of Alexandria’s last datable poem, the Panegyric on the Sixth Consulship of Honorius, was delivered in Rome in 404, presumably on 1 January. This performance occurred in the course of the first visit to Rome by an emperor for nearly a decade and a half. Imperial visits to Rome were notoriously rare in the fourth century and, in a well-known passage of that poem, the
Claudian’s last panegyric and imperial visits to Rome. Gavin Kelly – 2016 – Classical Quarterly 66 (1):336-357. Caesar (A.M.) Riggsby Caesar in Gaul and Rome: War in Words. Pp. xii + 271, ills, map. Austin: University of Texas Press, 2006. Cased, US$45. ISBN: 978-0-292-71303-. [REVIEW] James Thorne – 2008 – The Classical Review 58 (2):446-.
Kelly 2016 = G. Kelly, Claudian’s Last Panegyric and Imperial Visits to Rome, CQ 66 (1), 2016, 336-357. VOCI DI ENCICLOPEDIE E REPERTORI: von Rohden 1895 = P. von Rohden, Arrecinus (1), in RE II, 1, 1895, col. 1226.
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Ad Astra: Imperial Mythology from Egypt to Rome
Claudian of Alexandria’s last datable poem, the Panegyric on the Sixth Consulship of Honorius, was delivered in Rome in 404, presumably on 1 January. This performance occurred in the course of the first visit to Rome by an emperor for nearly a decade and a half. Imperial visits to Rome were notoriously rare in the fourth century and, in a well-known passage of that poem, the The historical importance of Claudian as writer of panegyric and propaganda for the court of Honorius is well established but his poetry has been comparatively neglected: only recently has his work been the subject of modern literary criticism. Taking as its starting point Claudian’s claim to be the heir to Virgil, this book examines his poetry as part of the Roman epic tradition.
Kelly, G. (2016). Claudian’s last panegyric and imperial visits to Rome. The Classical Quarterly, 66, 336- 357. Lendle, O. (1992). Einführung in die griechische Geschichtsschreibung: von Hekataios bis Zosimos. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. McPhail, C. (2014). Pytheas of Massalia’s route of travel. Phoenix 68, (3/4), 247
Related References Gozalbes Cravioto, E.; Garcia Garcia, I. 2007: La primera peste de los antoninos (165-170). Una epidemia en la Roma imperial – The first «Antonine Plague» (165-170) a epidemic in the imperial Rome – La première peste antonine (165-170). Une épidémie dans la Rome impérialeAsclepio 59 (1): 7-21 Souza Júnior, T.P.; Dubas, J.P.; Pereira, B.; Oliveira, P.R. CLAUDIAN’S LAST PANEGYRIC AND IMPERIAL VISITS TO ROME * Gavin Kelly Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 March 2016, pp. 336-357 Article Get access Check if you have access via personal or institutional login Log in Register Export citation View extract Claudian’s last panegyric and imperial visits to Rome. The Classical Quarterly, 66, 336-357. Lendle, O. (1992). Einführung in die griechische Geschichtsschreibung: von Hekataios bis Zosimos.
Kelly, G. 2016: Claudian’s Last Panegyric and Imperial Visits to RomeThe Classical Quarterly 66 (1): 336-357 Fears, J.R. 1976: The Solar Monarchy of Nero and the Imperial Panegyric of Q. Curtius RufusHistoria 25 (4): 494-496 Kim, T.H. 1998: The anarthrous yios theou in Mark 15,39 and the Roman imperial cult – yios theou dans l’évangile de Marc 15,39 et le culte roman
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1.2-Claudian, the old and the new: continuities in Roman tradition. What we read in Claudian’s panegyric is, on the contrary, much more consistent with Roman traditional conceptions of the Past. There are actually very few mentions of the past in the panegyric, but this is not surprising if we consider that, from Claudian’s point of view, Resumen Este estudio presenta una nueva lectura del capítulo 29 del panegírico de Pacatus Drepanius en honor de Theodosius I (389) concerniente a la condena de los priscilianistas por el usurpador Magnus Maximus (385), al que se ha prestado una atención subsidiaria en la investigación reciente. El capítulo objeto de comentario forma parte de la invectiva antitiránica Claudian’s last panegyric and imperial visits to Rome. The Classical Quarterly, 66, 336-357. Lendle, O. (1992). Einführung in die griechische Geschichtsschreibung: von Hekataios bis Zosimos. Darmstadt: Wissenschaftliche Buchgesellschaft. McPhail, C. (2014). Pytheas of Massalia’s route of travel. Phoenix 68, (3/4), 247-257. Meister, K. (1990).
Claudian’s last panegyric and imperial visits to Rome Article Mar 2016 Gavin Kelly Kelly 2016 = G. Kelly, Claudian’s Last Panegyric and Imperial Visits to Rome, CQ 66 (1), 2016, 336-357. VOCI DI ENCICLOPEDIE E REPERTORI: von Rohden 1895 = P. von Rohden, Arrecinus (1), in RE II, 1, 1895, col. 1226. Kelly 2016 = G. Kelly, Claudian’s Last Panegyric and Imperial Visits to Rome, CQ 66 (1), 2016, 336-357. VOCI DI ENCICLOPEDIE E REPERTORI: von Rohden 1895 = P. von Rohden, Arrecinus (1), in RE II, 1, 1895, col. 1226.
Congress (112): 51-58 Ker, J. 2004: Nocturnal Writers in Imperial Rome: the Culture of LucubratioClassical Philology 99 (3): 209-242 Brodersen, K. 2024: Libraries in Imperial Rome.
Claudian wrote his last dated poem in 404. Nothing is heard of him after that date and it is likely he died soon thereafter.Claudian’s Christian contemporary, Aurelius Prudentius Clemens, was born, according to the verse preface he wrote to his collected works, in 348.
Richard Flower – 2015 – Classical Quarterly 65 (2):822-835. Claudian’s last panegyric and imperial visits to Rome. Gavin Kelly – 2016 – Classical Quarterly 66 (1):336-357. Bibliographische Notizen und Mitteilungen. Peter Schreiner & Sonja Güntner – 2004 – ‘Claudian’s Last Panegyric and Imperial Visits to Rome’, Classical Quarterly 66 (2016), 336-357. ‘The First Book of Symmachus’ Letters as an Independent Collection’, in P.F. Moretti, R. Ricci, and C. Torre (eds) Culture and Literature in Latin Late Antiquity. Continuities and Discontinuities (Brepols: Turnhout, 2015 [2016]), 197-220.
Gavin Kelly, University of Edinburgh, School of History, Classics and Archaeology, Faculty Member. Studies Classics, Ancient Historiography, and Ancient History. Of course, this freedom of movement implied that Rome controlled every region of the Empire, even those that had caused trouble in the past. Together with Sidonius Apollinaris, Claudian was among the few last Latin poets writing when the Western Roman Empire still existed, who constantly recalled the name of Rome in the panegyrics they wrote.
Epic, verse panegyric in Latin, a form of public oratory given its debut in Rome by Claudian in the 390s, provides an index to the politics of the imperial city over the next three generations. Both the first and the last known performances of epic panegyric in Claudian’s style occurred in Rome. 1 The relatively brief and circumscribed life of this subgenre, its divergences from earlier
Claudian’s last panegyric and imperial visits to Rome Classical Quarterly 2016 | Journal article Show more detail Imperial visits to Rome were notoriously rare in the fourth century and, in a well-known passage of that poem, the goddess Roma herself muses on their rarity: she had only seen an Augustus three times in the last hundred years (VI Cos. 392–3).
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