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  1. Plus ca change.... Ancient Historians and their Sources.A. Brian Bosworth - 2003 - Classical Antiquity 22 (2):167-198.
    This article addresses the problem of veracity in ancient historiography. It contests some recent views that the criteria of truth in historical writing were comparable to the standards of forensic rhetoric. Against this I contend that the historians of antiquity did follow their sources with commendable fi delity, superimposing a layer of comment but not adding independent material. To illustrate the point I examine the techniques of the Alexander historian, Q. Curtius Rufus, comparing his treatment of events with a range (...)
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  • Josephus’ Nabataeans: a vision of Roman power in the Near East.Anna Accettola - 2020 - Journal of Ancient History 8 (2):256-280.
    Nabataean history is significantly overlooked in the works of ancient historians. Josephus is an exception to this, as he includes several important events from Nabataean history in De Bello Judaico and Antiquitates Judaicae. However, his retelling of these events differs between the two works. In this paper, I argue that Josephus became more “pro-Roman” over time and eventually overshadowed an accurate portrayal of Nabataean history in his later narrative. He undermined moments of tension between Rome and Nabataea in order to (...)
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  • Plutarch's method of work in the Roman lives.Christopher Pelling - 1979 - Journal of Hellenic Studies 99:74-96.
  • Was tut ein Geschichtsschreiber?: Formen auktorialen Handelns in Lukian, De historia conscribenda.Thomas Kuhn-Treichel - 2020 - Philologus: Zeitschrift für Antike Literatur Und Ihre Rezeption 164 (2):250-2689.
    Lucian’s work De historia conscribenda not only presents reflections on how one should or should not write history, but also illustrates possible ways to represent the authorial activity of a historian (i. e. how one writes ‘metahistory’). In this, two basic forms can be distinguished, both of which can be understood from a narratological perspective as metalepses. In the first case, the historian is represented as the direct originator of the action; in the second he acts as a mere observer, (...)
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