Omnium Annalium Monumenta : Historical Writing and Historical Evidence in Republican Rome.
- 1st ed.
- 1 online resource (553 pages)
- Historiography of Rome and Its Empire Series ; v.2 .
- Historiography of Rome and Its Empire Series .
Intro -- Contents -- Preface -- List of Figures -- Abbreviations -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction -- Part 1 The Origins of the Annalistic Tradition -- Chapter 1 Fabius Pictor, Ennius and the Origins of Roman Annalistic Historiography -- Chapter 2 L'"archéologie" de Rome dans les Annales d'Ennius : poetica fabula ou annalium monumentum ? -- Chapter 3 The Discovery of Numa's Writings: Roman Sacral Law and the Early Historians -- Part 2 Antiquarians and Historians -- Chapter 4 On the Edges of History -- Chapter 5 Diligentissumus investigator antiquitatis? 'Antiquarianism' and Historical Evidence between Republican Rome and the Early Modern Republic of Letters -- Chapter 6 Inspired Leaders versus Emerging Nations: Varro's and Cicero's Views on Early Rome -- Chapter 7 Which One is the Historian? A Neglected Problem in the Study of Roman Historiography -- Part 3 History and Oratory -- Chapter 8 How Much History did the Romans Know? Historical References in Cicero's Speeches to the People -- Chapter 9 Ciceronian Constructions of the Oratorical Past -- Chapter 10 Cicero, Documents and the Implications for History -- Part 4 The Literary Construction of History -- Chapter 11 Livy's Battle in the Forum between Roman Monuments and Greek Literature -- Chapter 12 Echi dalle tragedie tebane nelle storie di Roma arcaica -- Chapter 13 Figures of Memory. Aulus Vibenna, Valerius Publicola and Mezentius between History and Legend -- Part 5 History and Monuments -- Chapter 14 Monumenta, Documenta, Memoria: Remembering and Imagining the Past in Late Republican Rome -- Chapter 15 Visibility Matters. Notes on Archaic Monuments and Collective Memory in Mid-Republican Rome -- Chapter 16 Aedificare, res damnosissima. Building and Historiography in Livy, Books 5-6 -- Chapter 17 Memoria by Multiplication: The Cornelii Scipiones in Monumental Memory. Chapter 18 Constructing, Deconstructing and Reconstructing Civic Memory in Late Republican Rome -- Index Locorum.
Historical Writing and Historical Evidence in Republican Rome: Omnium Annalium Monumenta is a major collection of essays by distinguished authors on the development of Roman historiography.