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A Companion to the Political Culture of the Roman Republic


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      Valentina Arena is Professor of Ancient History at University College London, UK. Her work focuses on the history of Roman politics and ancient political thought as well as the wider intellectual landscape of the Roman Republic, with a particular interest in Roman oratory and antiquarianism. She is the author of Libertas and the Practice of Politics in the late Roman Republic and the editor of Liberty: an Ancient Concept for the Contemporary World. She has co-edited volumes on Varro and the antiquarian tradition (Varronian Moments, with F. Mac Góráin; Reconstructing the Republic: Varro and Imperial Authors, with Giorgio Piras) and is currently co-editing the first volume of the Cambridge History of Democracy. She is currently the Principal Investigator of the European Research Council (ERC) funded research project Ordering, Constructing, Empowering: Fragments of the Roman Republican Antiquarians (FRRAnt).

      Jonathan Prag is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Oxford. He works on the history of the Roman Republic, ancient Sicily and the western Mediterranean in the Hellenistic and Republican periods. He has previously edited The Hellenistic West (Cambridge 2013) and A Handbook to Petronius (Blackwell 2009). He has published extensively on ancient Sicily in particular, and his current research focuses on epigraphy and the application of digital methods to ancient history. He directs the ERC ‘Crossreads’ project (2020– 2025) and the I.Sicily epigraphic corpus (http://sicily.classics.ox.ac.uk).

      Andrew Stiles received a BA (Hons) and MPhil from the University of Sydney, and a DPhil from the University of Oxford, and has taught classics and ancient history at Oxford, University College London and Sydney. His research interests include the political, social and religious history of the late Roman Republic and early Principate, and the history of ideas in the Roman world. He has published on Ovid, Germanicus, Julio-Claudian politics, religion and divination.

      Ryan K. Balot is Professor of Political Science at the University of Toronto. He is the author of Greed and Injustice in Classical Athens (2001), of Greek Political Thought (2006) and of Courage in the Democratic Polis: Ideology and Critique in Classical Athens. He is also the editor of A Companion to Greek and Roman Political Thought (2009) and co-editor of The