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Rome --- History --- Republic, 265-30 B.C.
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Rome --- History --- -Rome --- Rome - History - Republic, 265-30 B.C
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"The international discussion on the political culture of the Roman republic, which began in the 1980s and is still going on, is one of the most vibrant and lively debates in the Classics. This collection of essays--all revised and updated--offers fresh approaches to central themes of the debate: Roman republican social and political order in scholarship in the 20th century; the origins and development of the aforementioned debate; the emergence of new questions, fields of research, theoretical and methodological approaches; the constitution of the ruling class; the concept of 'political culture'; the importance of public oratory; the character and role of the 'public' in a 'city-state'--contio and comitia; the role of history and collective memory; the performative construction of hierarchy and 'power'; performative media of self-presentation--processions and other rituals; monumental and other visual media of self-fashioning--temples, spoils and statues; the self-fashioning of prominent families--the Marcii and the Cornelii Scipiones."--Back cover.
Politics and government. --- Republicanism --- Republicanism. --- History --- 265-30 B.C. --- Rome (Empire). --- Rome --- Politics and government
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Caesar, Julius --- Caesar, Julius. --- 265-30 B.C. --- Rome (Empire). --- Rome --- History
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Rome --- History --- Politics and government --- Histoire --- Politique et gouvernement --- -Rome --- Rome - History - Republic, 265-30 B.C
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History as a science --- Roman history --- Rome --- Politics and government --- History --- Rome - Politics and government - 265-30 BC --- Rome - History - Republic, 265-30 B.C
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15.52 Roman Empire. --- Reception. --- Caesar, C. Julius, --- Caesar, Gaius Iulius, --- Caesar, Gaius Iulius. --- Caesar, Julius. --- 265-30 B.C. --- Rome (Empire). --- Rome --- Histoire --- History
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The political system of the Roman republic was marked by two areas of tension: Because there was no nobility by birth, but instead social ranking had to be attained through political activity, there was competition among the members of senatorial families. On the other hand, decision-making was based on consensus, and therefore was done through negotiation, which had to end with broad agreement. Trust in one's opponent was an essential condition for the simultaneous functioning of competition and consensus. This book investigates the functions, foundations, and forms of trust, as well as the strategy of self-presentation as trustworthy for actors in the political theater of Rome.
Political culture --- Political culture. --- Political science --- Political science. --- Politics and government. --- Trust --- Trust. --- History --- 265-30 B.C. --- Rome (Empire). --- Rome --- Politics and government
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