: James H. Richardson
: The Fabii and the Gauls Studies in historical thought and historiography in Republican Rome
: Franz Steiner Verlag
: 9783515101547
: Historia ? Einzelschriften
: 1
: CHF 55.90
:
: Geschichte
: English
: 186
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This e-book explores how Roman ideas about human behaviour and historiography affected the ways in which the Romans wrote about their past. The first of the e-book's three chapters considers Roman views concerning human behaviour and the impact that these had on the traditions of Rome's past. The second looks at the presentation of thegens Fabia in the literary evidence and at the ways individual Fabii were said to have behaved. The final chapter examines the evidence for the Gallic sack of Rome and considers the influence that Greek historical traditions had on Rome's own traditions. Numerous members of thegens Fabia were said to have acted in a similar manner and even to have done the same things, while the tradition of the Gallic sack bears a striking resemblance to the tradition of the Persian sack of Athens. Scholarship usually maintains that individual historians such as Fabius Pictor were responsible for devising these sorts of parallels, and that they did so for their own literary and political purposes. The principal argument put forward here is that they are the inevitable product of Roman historical thought, and so need not be attributed to any one historian.



James H. Richardson is Lecturer in Classics at Massey University.
PREFACE6
CONTENTS8
INTRODUCTION10
I. THE INFLUENCE OF NOBLE SELF-PRESENTATION ON HISTORICAL THOUGHT AND HISTORIOGRAPHY18
1. INTRODUCTION18
2. MODELS OF BEHAVIOUR22
3. THINKING DIFFERENTLy31
4. HEIRS, ASPIRATIONS AND ExPECTATIONS39
5. GENERAL CLAIMS48
6. SIGNIFICANCE53
II. THE TRADITIONS OF THE FABII58
1. INTRODUCTION58
2. Q. FABIUS VERRUCOSUS, ‘THE DELAyER’59
3. THE FABII VIBULANI AND THE CONCORD OF THE STATE66
4. THE BATTLE OF CREMERA AND THE STORY OF THE SOLE SURVIVOR82
5. THE FABII AND THE SEMPRONII84
6. ELDERLy FATHERS AND RASH SONS85
7. Q. FABIUS MAXIMUS VERRUCOSUS AND Q. FABIUS MAXIMUS RULLIANUS95
8. THE PIETY OF THE FABII106
9. THE FABII AND CONSPIRACIES AGAINST THE STATE111
10. CONCLUSION113
III. THE FABII AND THE GAULS116
1. INTRODUCTION116
2. THE SACK OF ROME117
3. HISTORY AND TRADITION124
4. ATHENS AND ROME131
5. THE FABII AND THE GAULS140
6. THE FABII AND THE CONSULSHIP154
7. CONCLUSIONS160
EPILOGUE164
BIBLIOGRAPHY166
INDEX176