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  1. Appropriation and Adaptation: Republican Idiom in Res Gestae 1.1.Louise Hodgson - 2014 - Classical Quarterly 64 (1):254-269.
    Augustus opens theRes Gestaewith his age: ‘nineteen years old’ (annos undeviginti natus). This places the reader firmly in the autumn of 44, rather than the aftermath of Caesar's assassination on the Ides when Octavian had been eighteen, presumably because the credibility of Octavian's claim to have liberated theres publicarested on his military intervention against Antony and the senate's commendation of it. Velleius Paterculus' summation (which echoes Augustus' formulation in theRG) is clear enough: although the domination of Antony was universally resented, (...)
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  • The construction Of Clodius In Cicero's Speeches.Robin Seager - 2014 - Classical Quarterly 64 (1):226-240.
    The purpose of this paper is to examine the variations in Cicero's treatment of Clodius in his speeches and to suggest reasons why these variations occur. The treatment of five principal themes will be considered: Clodius' relationship with Gabinius and Piso; Clodius’ alleged link with Catiline and/or surviving Catilinarians; the Bona Dea affair; Clodius’ alleged incest with one or more of his sisters; Clodius’ supposed insanity, which clearly exceeded the tribunician norm.
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  • (1 other version)‘Populares’ in Livy and the Livian Tradition.Robin Seager - 1977 - Classical Quarterly 27 (02):377-.
    This paper essays a reconstruction of Livy's attitude to and treatment of the major ‘popularis’ figures of the late republic, from Ti. Gracchus to Cinna and Carbo. The opening section examines four situations involving ‘popularis’ prototypes: the careers of Sp. Cassius, Sp. Maelius, and Manlius Capitolinus and the fall of Ap. Claudius the decemvir. It first considers Livy's use of what by his time had become standard themes in writing about ‘populares’, then attempts to establish the possible antiquity of these (...)
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  • (1 other version)‘Populares’ in Livy and the Livian Tradition.Robin Seager - 1977 - Classical Quarterly 27 (2):377-390.
    This paper essays a reconstruction of Livy's attitude to and treatment of the major ‘popularis’ figures of the late republic, from Ti. Gracchus to Cinna and Carbo. The opening section examines four situations involving ‘popularis’ prototypes: the careers of Sp. Cassius, Sp. Maelius, and Manlius Capitolinus and the fall of Ap. Claudius the decemvir. It first considers Livy's use of what by his time had become standard themes in writing about ‘populares’, then attempts to establish the possible antiquity of these (...)
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  • The Bellvm Civile Pompeianvm: The War of Words.Pedro López Barja de Quiroga - 2019 - Classical Quarterly 69 (2):700-714.
    The irrelevance of ideology is perhaps one of the most strongly held views shared by the historians of the Late Republic. As indicated by Matthias Gelzer in 1912, in those final years of the Roman Republic, ‘political struggles were fought out by thenobilesat the head of their dependents’. In his opinion, this was nothing more than a power struggle, in which slogans or ideas were merely propaganda, without any real value. In 1931, analysing the political proposals of Cicero, Gelzer's disciple (...)
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