
One Of The Great Maxims Of History Is That It Is Written By The Victors, And Nowhere Does This Find Greater Support Than In The Later Roman Empire. Between 284 And 395 Ad, No Fewer Than 37 Men Claimed Imperial Power, Though Today We Recognize Barely Half Of These Men As 'legitimate' Rulers And More Than Two Thirds Died At Their Subjects' Hands. Once Established In Power, A New Ruler Needed To Publicly Legitimate Himself And To Discredit His Predecessor: Overt Criticism Of The New Regime Became High Treason, With Historians Supressing Their Accounts For Fear Of Reprisals And The Very Names Of Defeated Emperors Chiselled From Public Inscriptions And Deleted From Official Records. In A Period Of Such Chaos, How Can We Ever Hope To Record In Any Fair Or Objective Way The History Of The Roman State? Emperors And Usurpers In The Later Roman Empire Is The First History Of Civil War In The Later Roman Empire To Be Written In English And Aims To Address This Question By Focusing On The Various Ways In Which Successive Imperial Dynasties Attempted To Legitimate Themselves And To Counter The Threat Of Almost Perpetual Internal Challenge To Their Rule. Panegyric In Particular Emerges As A Crucial Tool For Understanding The Rapidly Changing Political World Of The Third And Fourth Centuries, Providing Direct Evidence Of How, In The Wake Of Civil Wars, Emperors Attempted To Publish Their Legitimacy And To Delegitimize Their Enemies. The Ceremony And Oratory Surrounding Imperial Courts Too Was Of Great Significance: Used Aggressively To Dramatize And Constantly Recall The Events Of Recent Civil Wars, The Narratives Produced By The Court In This Context Also Went On To Have Enormous Influence On The Messages And Narratives Found Within Contemporary Historical Texts. In Its Exploration Of The Ways In Which Successive Imperial Courts Sought To Communicate With Their Subjects, This Volume Offers A Thoroughly Original Reworking Of Late Roman Domestic Politics, And Demonstrates Not Only
This work investigates how Roman emperors between 284 and 395 AD utilized rhetoric, public ceremony, and panegyric to construct political legitimacy amidst frequent civil wars and internal challenges. Adrastos Omissi, a scholar of late antiquity, examines the mechanisms of imperial propaganda and the systematic erasure of defeated rivals from the historical record. By analyzing the intersection of court oratory and contemporary historiography, the author argues that the narratives of the victors were not merely passive accounts but active tools of political survival and regime stabilization.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this text as a significant contribution to the study of late Roman political culture and the manipulation of historical memory. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the analysis, which provides a nuanced understanding of how imperial regimes maintained control through the control of information.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
0191863513
ISBN-13:
9780191863516
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!