SallustUniversity of California Press, 28 apr 2023 - 433 pagine With this classic book, Sir Ronald Syme became the first historian of the twentieth century to place Sallust—whom Tacitus called the most brilliant Roman historian—in his social, political, and literary context. Scholars had considered Sallust to be a mere political hack or pamphleteer, but Syme's text makes important connections between the politics of the Republic and the literary achievement of the author to show Sallust as a historian unbiased by partisanship. In a new foreword, Ronald Mellor delivers one of the most thorough biographical essays of Sir Ronald Syme in English. He both places the book in the context of Syme's other works and details the progression of Sallustian studies since and as a result of Syme's work. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-5 di 54
Pagina xii
... enemies , rewarded his friends , and established a new regime . Thus Syme used chapter titles like " Dux " and " The First March on Rome " ; his chapter " Political Catchwords " reflects a deep , and Tacitean , distrust of the political ...
... enemies , rewarded his friends , and established a new regime . Thus Syme used chapter titles like " Dux " and " The First March on Rome " ; his chapter " Political Catchwords " reflects a deep , and Tacitean , distrust of the political ...
Pagina 6
... enemy . P. Vatinius had failed to win the votes of his own tribe , the " Sergia , " in which some of the old Sabines were enrolled along with the Marsians and the Paeligni . What a rebuff ! Nobody since the founding of Rome , the orator ...
... enemy . P. Vatinius had failed to win the votes of his own tribe , the " Sergia , " in which some of the old Sabines were enrolled along with the Marsians and the Paeligni . What a rebuff ! Nobody since the founding of Rome , the orator ...
Pagina 19
... enemies . Pompeius enjoyed a preponderance with the People , and through tribunes ' bills he got great commands abroad . In the five years of his absence his name hung over Rome like a heavy cloud . What would be the manner of his ...
... enemies . Pompeius enjoyed a preponderance with the People , and through tribunes ' bills he got great commands abroad . In the five years of his absence his name hung over Rome like a heavy cloud . What would be the manner of his ...
Pagina 23
... enemies of the Optimates . Cicero at a later date , when 23 Apart from a late fable ( p . 284 ) . 24 P. 93 . 25 Cat . 48. 8 : " ne Crassus more suo suscepto malorum patrocinio rem pub- licam conturbaret . " That Sallust was an adherent ...
... enemies of the Optimates . Cicero at a later date , when 23 Apart from a late fable ( p . 284 ) . 24 P. 93 . 25 Cat . 48. 8 : " ne Crassus more suo suscepto malorum patrocinio rem pub- licam conturbaret . " That Sallust was an adherent ...
Pagina 26
... enemy of Sulla's cause , and an enemy of Annius Milo . Further , when old Varro impugned the morals of Sallust , he was moved 35 Cat . 25 , see further p . 133 . 36 Fausta suitably had simultaneous paramours : Fulvius the son of a dyer ...
... enemy of Sulla's cause , and an enemy of Annius Milo . Further , when old Varro impugned the morals of Sallust , he was moved 35 Cat . 25 , see further p . 133 . 36 Fausta suitably had simultaneous paramours : Fulvius the son of a dyer ...
Sommario
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31 | |
45 | |
THE BELLUM CATILINAE | 62 |
THE CREDULITY OF SALLUST | 85 |
CAESAR AND CATO | 105 |
THE BELLUM JUGURTHINUM POLITICS | 159 |
THE HISTORIAE | 180 |
THE TIME OF WRITING | 216 |
HISTORY AND STYLE | 242 |
THE FAME OF SALLUST | 276 |
THE EVOLUTION OF SALLUSTS STYLE | 307 |
THE FALSE SALLUST | 315 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 357 |
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Aemilius Amiternum ancient Antonius Appian army Asconius atque Atticus Augustus Autronius Bellum Catilinae Bellum Jugurthinum Bestia Brutus Büchner Caesar Caesar Augustus Cassius Catilina Catilinarian Cato Catulus Cicero Cirta Clodius conspiracy conspirators consul consular consulship Crassus dignitas digression Divus elected enemies Epistulae further Gellius Gelzer Greek Hermes Hist historian homines honour Invective Italy Jugurtha later Latin Lentulus Lepidus literary Livy Lucullus Manlius Marius Memmius Messalla Metellus monograph Münzer Mus.Helv narration nobiles nobilitas notion novus homo Numidia Octavianus oration partisan Penna perhaps Piso plebs Plutarch political Pollio Pompeius Magnus praetor proconsul prologue quaestor quam Quintilian Republic Rom.Rev Roman Revolution Rome Rufus Sabine Sallust Sallustian Sallustius Sallustius Crispus Scaurus scholars Sempronia Senate Sertorius Sisenna speech style Suasoriae Suetonius Sulla Sulla's Symb.Osl Syme Syme's Tacitus theme Thucydides tion tribune Triumvirs Varro Vretska words writing
Brani popolari
Pagina 85 - Nam quis nescit, primam esse historiae legem, ne quid falsi dicere audeat ? deinde ne quid veri non audeat?
Pagina xxix - A gulf profound as that Serbonian bog Betwixt Damiata and mount Casius old, Where armies whole have sunk : the parching air Burns frore, and cold performs the effect of fire.
Pagina 280 - Pius aut de pace C. Sallustium scriptorem seriae illius et severae orationis, in cuius historia notiones censorias fieri atque exerceri videmus, in adulterio deprehensum ab Annio Milone loris bene caesum dicit et, cum dedisset pecuniam, dimissum.
Pagina 128 - Namque uti paucis verum absolvam, post illa tempora quicumque rem publicam agitavere, honestis nominibus, alii sicuti populi iura defenderent, pars quo senatus auctoritas maxuma foret, bonum publicum simulantes, pro sua quisque potentia certabant; neque illis modestia, neque modus contentionis erat; utrique victoriam crudeliter exercebant.
Pagina 33 - Hoc significat eo die quo Clodius occisus est contionatum esse mercennarium eius tribunum plebis. Sunt autem contionati eo die, ut ex Actis apparet, C. Sallustius et Q. Pompeius, utrique et inimici Milonis et satis inquieti. Sed videtur mihi Q. Pompeium significare; nam eius seditiosior fuit contio.
Pagina 245 - De poena possum equidem dicere — id quod res habet — in luctu atque miseriis mortem aerumnarum requiem, non cruciatum esse ; earn cuneta mortalium mala dissolvere ; ultra ñeque curae ñeque gaudio locum esse.
Pagina 337 - ... postremo servitus imposita est. equidem ego sic apud animum meum statuo : cuicumque in sua civitate amplior inlustriorque locus quam aliis est, ei magnam curam esse rei publicae.