From Republic to Principate: an Historical Commentary on by Meyer Reinhold

By Meyer Reinhold

E-book via Reinhold, Meyer

Show description

Read Online or Download From Republic to Principate: an Historical Commentary on Cassius Dio’s Roman History Books 49-52 (36-29 B.C.) PDF

Similar greek & roman books

The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Republic

Reading all facets of Roman historical past and civilization from 509-49 BC. , this better half spans the improvement of the vintage republican political procedure and the expansion of a global empire. It additionally files the last word disintegration of the procedure less than the relentless strain of inner dissension and the boundless ambition of prime politicians.

Aristotle in China: Language, Categories and Translation

This ebook considers the relation among language and suggestion. Robert Wardy explores this massive subject by means of studying linguistic relativism as regards to a chinese language translation of Aristotle's different types. He addresses a few key questions, reminiscent of, do the fundamental constructions of language form the key inspiration styles of its local audio system?

Vital Nourishment: Departing from Happiness

The philosophical culture within the West has continually subjected lifestyles to conceptual divisions and questions about which means. In important Nourishment, François Jullien contends that even supposing this technique has given upward thrust to a wealthy background of inquiry, it proceeds too quickly. of their nervousness approximately that means, Western thinkers when you consider that Plato have forgotten just to event existence.

Additional resources for From Republic to Principate: an Historical Commentary on Cassius Dio’s Roman History Books 49-52 (36-29 B.C.)

Sample text

5). N> L. 406; PIR2 C 1503) was consul in 35 and later governor of Africa, from which he returned to a triumph on 3 December 32. 5 év t

Cf. 106 [441]). 108 [445-446]) agree that Agrippa did not pursue theretreatingPompeian vessels after Mylae because his ships were heavy and slow, and because of the danger on the shoals to his ponderous ships and the need to rest his troops. Dio emphasizes, as Agrippa's reason for failure to pursue, that it was not possible to catch up with the enemy. But the most important factor was the flawed coordination of strategy by Octavian and Agrippa that resulted in the ensuing defeat of Octavian by Pompey in the Straits of Messina.

26-34. Sextus Pompey" employed 155 ships, Agrippa about 150 (out of a fleet of about 300). 3) carelessly states that Agrippa committed his entire fleet at the very beginning of the battle. 106 [437]), states that only after Agrippa discovered that Sextus had sent reinforcements did he summon the rest of his fleet with all speed. It is noteworthy that Dio here (as well as before the Battle of Naulochus) omits the usual exhortatio speeches by the leaders on both sides. Moreover, the accounts of both Dio and Appian are lacking in historical realism: they appear to have been written as conventional sea battles.

Download PDF sample

Rated 4.27 of 5 – based on 18 votes