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Volume 2 | Miscellanea | Cassius Dio and the Principate

Cassius Dio and the Principate

open access | peer reviewed
    a cura di
  • Christopher Burden-Strevens - University of Kent, UK - email
  • Jesper Majbom Madsen - Syddansk Universitet, Danmark - email
  • Antonio Pistellato - Università Ca’ Foscari Venezia, Italia - email orcid profile

Abstract

In the Imperial books of his Roman History, Cassius Dio focuses on individual emperors and imperial institutions to promote a political framework for the ideal monarchy, and to theorise autocracy’s typical problems and their solutions. The distinctive narrative structure of Dio’s work creates a unique sense of the past and allows us to see Roman history through a specific lens: that of a man who witnessed the Principate from the Antonines to the Severans. When Dio was writing, the Principate was a full-fledged historical fact, having experienced more than two hundred years of history, good and bad emperors, and three major civil wars. This collection of seven essays sets out to address these issues, and to see Dio not as an ‘adherent’ to or ‘advocate’ of monarchy, but rather as a theorist of its development and execution.

Keywords ConsiliumMacrinusIdeal emperorCiceroSeptimius SeverusCommodus and PertinaxMixed Constitution TheorySeveran dynastyThe Flavian dynastyCaligula and ClaudiusPrincipateMonarchyIdeal GovernmentAugustusImperatorElagabalusSenatePertinaxTitusDynastic successionCaracallaIron ageVespasianImperial HistoriographyRoman HistoryCivilitas PrincipisCassius DioStoicismAncient RomeDomitianPolitical structureCaesarVirtueContemporary historiographyCassius Dio’s contemporary historyEmperor-Senate relationships

Permalink http://doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-472-1 | e-ISBN 978-88-6969-472-1 | ISBN (PRINT) 978-88-6969-473-8 | Numero pagine 188 | Dimensioni 16x23cm | Pubblicato 21 Dicembre 2020 | Lingua it, en