Politics in the Monuments of Pompey the Great and Julius Caesar

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ancient political communication
Ancus Marcius
architectural propaganda
Atrium Libertatis
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Basilica Aemilia
Basilica Iulia
Caesar's Models
Caesar's Statue
Caesar’s Models
Caesar’s Statue
Campus Martius
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Commentariolum Petitionis
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Curia Hostilia
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elite patronage
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Gens Iulia
Hercules Invictus
Julius Proculus
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late republican rome
monumental ideology
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Paullus Aemilius Lepidus
Pompey's Theatre
Pompey’s Theatre
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republican era architectural politics
roman urbanism
Saepta Iulia
Scaenae Frons
Scipio Aemilianus
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Triumphal Path
Van Ooteghem
Venus Genetrix
Venus Victrix
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780367531140
  • Weight: 360g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Oct 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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This book explores the diachronic development of the ideological content of Pompey and Caesar’s monuments in Rome, emphasising the importance of the late Republican period as a precursor to imperial propaganda through architecture.

In the final years of the Roman Republic, individuals such as Pompey the Great and Julius Caesar exploited the communicative power of architecture. The former promoted the first and largest stone theatre in Rome; the latter started comprehensive town-planning projects that arguably verged on the utopian. Yet the study of the politics expressed by these monuments and how complex late Republican politics shaped the monuments themselves has attracted less attention than that of subsequent imperial architecture. Zampieri addresses this imbalance, exploring the ideological meaning of late Republican monuments and highlighting that monuments were fluid, adaptable entities, even in the lifespan of a single individual. Accompanied by detailed maps and images, this volume shows how late Republican architecture should be considered an important source for understanding politics of this period.

Politics in the Monuments of Pompey the Great and Julius Caesar will be of use to anyone working on the politics and social world of the late Roman Republic, and on Roman architecture and patronage.

Eleonora Zampieri is Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellow in Roman History at the Department of Historical, Geographical and Antiquity Studies of the University of Padua (Italy). Her research interests focus on Roman late Republican politics, elections, and institutions, as well as on provincial governance during the Roman Republic.

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