Julius Caesar in Western CultureMaria Wyke John Wiley & Sons, 15/04/2008 - 384 من الصفحات This book explores the significance of Julius Caesar to different periods, societies and people from the 50s BC through to the twenty-first century.
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الصفحة 8
... him or her nowhere in this life to go. If it was in this way that Caesar had it coming, that reflects on the political climate more than on the man himself. There is something of that in the account of Appian.11 8 8 Christopher Pelling.
... him or her nowhere in this life to go. If it was in this way that Caesar had it coming, that reflects on the political climate more than on the man himself. There is something of that in the account of Appian.11 8 8 Christopher Pelling.
الصفحة 9
... (Appian, BC 1.4.16–17)12 Not that it was just the fault of Brutus and Cassius: indeed, the conspirators do not come off at all badly in Appian's portrayal, even if their cause is misguided.13 The reason Caesar falls is more because of ...
... (Appian, BC 1.4.16–17)12 Not that it was just the fault of Brutus and Cassius: indeed, the conspirators do not come off at all badly in Appian's portrayal, even if their cause is misguided.13 The reason Caesar falls is more because of ...
الصفحة 11
... Appian that the principate is a good and necessary thing):24 but Caesar hurries Rome down that path too soon, and he suffers for it.25 Nor is this Caesar well equipped to play the imperial role. This Rome is already on the way to the ...
... Appian that the principate is a good and necessary thing):24 but Caesar hurries Rome down that path too soon, and he suffers for it.25 Nor is this Caesar well equipped to play the imperial role. This Rome is already on the way to the ...
الصفحة 22
... Appian, Dio, and Plutarch overlaps with a paper in which I discuss how each of these accounts presses on any generic ... Appian's choice of language cf. Gowing (1992), 164, 178. As Rawson (1986), 110–12 = (1991), 497–500 notes: cf ...
... Appian, Dio, and Plutarch overlaps with a paper in which I discuss how each of these accounts presses on any generic ... Appian's choice of language cf. Gowing (1992), 164, 178. As Rawson (1986), 110–12 = (1991), 497–500 notes: cf ...
الصفحة 32
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المحتوى
Part II Literary Characterization | 27 |
Part III The City of Rome | 83 |
Part IV Statecraft and Nationalism | 129 |
Part V Theatrical Performance | 203 |
Part VI Warfare and Revolution | 267 |
Afterword | 303 |
Bibliography | 324 |
Index | 352 |
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Alexander ambition American ancient military ancient Rome antiquity Antony Appian army assassination Augustus Bellum Civile biography Brutus Caes Caesar and Cleopatra Caesarian campaigns Cassius Cato century chapter Christian Cicero Cinna city’s classical clemency clementia Cleopatra comparison conquest contemporary context Corradini Cortile del Belvedere criticism culture death democracy depiction Derrida emperor empire epic essay example Fascist figure film Forum Forzano France French Gallic Gaul glory Greek Guazzoni’s hero imperial Italian Italy Jackson Julian Julius Caesar Kronia later Latin literary Lucan medieval modern Montaigne Montaigne’s murder Mussolini Napoleon Napoleon III nation Nicolaus obelisk Octavian Oranians papal Peter’s PLEBEIAN Plut Plutarch poet political Pollio Pompey pope popular president readers reading reception republican rhetoric role Roman Republic romanità Rome’s Rubicon Rufio Senate Shakespeare’s Shakespeare’s play Shaw Shaw’s Silenus soldiers story Suetonius suggests tion tradition translation triumphal tyranny Vatican Vercingetorix victory virtue writing