Types of Freedom and Submission in Tacitus' Agricola

In Aldo Setaioli (ed.), Apis Matina: Studi in onore di Carlo Santini. EUT Edizioni Università di Trieste. pp. 715-726 (2016)
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Abstract

Discusses conceptions of freedom displayed in Tacitus' Agricola. Tacitus seems to have had a clear-cut conceptual grid in which the German defectors, the Usipi, mirror the futile demonstrations of freedom by senators seeking a "ambitious death." The British provincials, including Calgacus and his followers, correspond to the ordinary Roman people and their leadership. It is in the army that a form of non-debasing hierarchy for the common benefit can be conceived, as long as the army and their leader is in the field. Problems arise when the military meets the civilian sphere.

Author's Profile

Jula Wildberger
The American University of Paris

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