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Claudius Caesar

Claudius Caesar

Claudius Caesar

Image and Power in the Early Roman Empire
Josiah Osgood, Georgetown University, Washington DC
November 2010
Available
Paperback
9780521708258
£29.99
GBP
Paperback
GBP
Hardback

    The story of Claudius has often been told before. Ancient writers saw the emperor as the dupe of his wives and palace insiders; Robert Graves tried to rehabilitate him as a far shrewder, if still frustrated, politician. In this book, Josiah Osgood shifts the focus off the personality of Claudius and on to what his tumultuous years in power reveal about the developing political culture of the early Roman Empire. What precedents set by Augustus were followed? What had to be abandoned? How could a new emperor win the support of key elements of Roman society? This richly illustrated discussion draws on a range of newly discovered documents, exploring events that move far beyond the city of Rome and Italy to Egypt and Judea, Morocco and Britain. Claudius Caesar provides a new perspective not just on Claudius himself, but on all Roman emperors, the Roman Empire, and the nature of empires more generally.

    • Gripping narrative of Claudius' years in power, allowing the reader to understand the interrelationship of key events and the process of decision-making within one emperor's reign
    • Exploits many recently discovered documents, as well as more familiar texts such as Tacitus' history and the New Testament, and explores how these can best be used for the reconstruction of imperial history
    • Includes numerous illustrations, demonstrating how important visual imagery was in the political culture of Rome

    Product details

    November 2010
    Paperback
    9780521708258
    374 pages
    229 × 152 × 17 mm
    0.59kg
    82 b/w illus. 5 maps
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Prologue: the Roman Empire in 41 AD
    • Introduction: the problem of Claudius
    • 1. Claudius Caesar
    • 2. A statue in silver
    • 3. Imperial favors
    • 4. Subduing the ocean
    • 5. Lists of peoples and places
    • 6. Caesar-lovers
    • 7. The eight hundredth year of Rome
    • 8. Practical pyramids
    • 9. The burden of government
    • 10. The judgment of Pallas
    • 11. Signaling retreat?
    • 12. The golden predicament.
      Author
    • Josiah Osgood , Georgetown University, Washington DC

      Josiah Osgood is Associate Professor of Classics at Georgetown University. His teaching and research touch many areas of Roman history and Latin literature, but focus especially on the late Roman Republic and early Empire. His first book, Caesar's Legacy: Civil War and the Emergence of the Roman Empire (Cambridge University Press, 2006), examined the period after the assassination of Julius Caesar. Osgood has more recently published several articles on Caesar, as well as aspects of Roman family life and education. He is currently finishing a Latin textbook for intermediate and advanced students, A Suetonius Reader, and is also co-editing with Susanna Braund A Companion to Persius and Juvenal.