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Caesar and nicomedes

Classical Quarterly 58 (2):687- (2008)

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  1. Priestly Auctoritas in the Roman Republic.Federico Santangelo - 2013 - Classical Quarterly 63 (2):743-763.
    Some of the best recent work on Roman priesthoods under the Republic has engaged with the issue of priestly authority and its role in defining the place of priesthoods vis-à-vis other centres of power, influence and knowledge. The aim of this paper is to make a contribution to this line of enquiry by focussing on the concept of priestlyauctoritas, which has seldom received close attention. The working hypothesis is that the study of priestlyauctoritasmay contribute to a broader understanding of the (...)
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  • Emperors’ Nicknames and Roman Political Humour.Alexander V. Makhlaiuk - 2020 - Klio 102 (1):202-235.
    Summary The article examines unofficial imperial nicknames, sobriquets and appellatives, from Octavian Augustus to Julian the Apostate, in the light of traditions of Roman political humour, and argues that in the political field during the Principate there were two co-existing competing modes of emperors’ naming: along with an official one, politically loyal, formalised and institutionally legitimised, there existed another – unofficial, sometimes oppositional and even hostile towards individual emperors, frequently licentious, humorously coloured and, in this regard, deeply rooted in Roman (...)
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