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A Companion to the Political Culture of the Roman Republic


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include Narrative and Event in Ancient Art (ed. 1993), The Origins of Roman Historical Commemoration in the Visual Arts (2002) and American Arcadia: California and the Classical Tradition (2016).

      E.J. Kondratieff earned his PhD in Ancient History at the University of Pennsylvania. His research interests and publications include Roman Republican institutions, political history and culture, material culture and numismatics, and the topography of Rome as a setting for political and social interaction. He also has a strong interest in the Principate of Augustus as a transitional period between republican and imperial systems of government, and in the Aeneid of Vergil, insofar as it embodies the tensions and concerns of that period. He has taught at several universities, and is currently Associate Professor of History at Western Kentucky University.

      Bernhard Linke is Professor of Roman history at Ruhr-Universität Bochum, with research focuses including ancient religion, naval warfare and the Roman Republic. His analysis of ancient religion concentrates on the interaction of religious conceptions and the public, political sphere. Linke advocates a dynamic approach towards the history of the Roman Republic that focuses on the specific, situational conditions of the historical subject, rather than overemphasising stability and continuity. The significance of the periphery is crucial to his understanding of the Roman expansion. He is the author of Antike Religion (2014) and Die römische Republik von den Gracchen bis Sulla (2015).

      Francisco Marco Simón is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Zaragoza. His main research interests include Roman and provincial religion, especially in western Celtic regions, and ancient magico-religious practices.

      Robert Morstein-Marx is Professor of Classics at the University of California, Santa Barbara. His research has focused for some time on late-Republican political history, especially political rhetoric, ideology and, most recently, Julius Caesar.

      Walter Nicgorski is Emeritus Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame. His writings on Cicero as well as other topics have appeared in various collections and journals. He edited and contributed to Cicero’s Practical Philosophy (2012). He directed summer seminars on the texts of Cicero for the National Endowment for the Humanities. He is the author of Cicero’s Skepticism and His Recovery of Political Philosophy (Palgrave Macmillan 2016).

      John A. North is Emeritus Professor of History at UCL. He taught Greek and Roman History there from 1963 to 2003 and was Head of the Department of History in the 1990s and Director of the London Institute of Classical Studies from 2011 to 2014. His publications have mostly concerned the history of pagan religion from early Rome to the emergence of Christianity, including Religions of Rome (with Mary Beard and Simon Price), Cambridge University Press 1998. More recently, he has written a chapter on the religious activities of slaves in the Classical World (Oxford Handbook of Greek and Roman Slaveries, available online, doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199575251.013.26).

      Francisco Pina Polo is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Zaragoza, Spain. His publications have focused on politics and institutions in the Roman Republic, particularly in the late Republican period, such as The Consul at Rome. The Civil Functions of the Consuls in the Roman Republic, Cambridge University Press 2011; Foreign Clientelae in the Roman Empire: a Reconsideration, Historia Einzelschriften, Stuttgart 2015 (with M. Jehne, eds.); The Quaestorship in the Roman Republic, Berlin 2019 (with A. Díaz Fernández). He is co-director of the series Libera Res Publica.

      Andrea Raggi is Associate Professor of Roman History at the University of Pisa. He is author of Seleuco di Rhosos. Cittadinanza e privilegi nell’Oriente greco in età tardo-repubblicana (2006), which was awarded the silver medal at the VII Gérard Boulvert International Prize in Roman Law 2007, and has published about 70 articles in peer-reviewed journals and books. His research focuses on the administrative history of the Roman Republic and the spread of the Roman citizenship.

      Stefan Rebenich is Professor of Ancient History and the Classical Tradition in the Department of History at the University of Bern (Switzerland). He has published widely in the field of late antiquity and the history of historiography, including Jerome (London 2002) and Theodor Mommsen. Eine Biographie (first published 2002, 2nd ed. Munich 2007). Most recently, he has edited a volume on Monarchische Herrschaft im Altertum (Berlin and Boston 2017) and, together with Hans-Ulrich Wiemer, on Julian the Apostate (Leiden and Berlin 2020).

      Francesca Rohr Vio is Professor of Roman History and History of Women in the Roman world at Ca’ Foscari University, Venice. She studies politics and political communication in the late Republic and in the early Empire and gender history in ancient Rome. Her most recent publications include: Publio Ventidio Basso (Rome 2009); Contro il principe. Congiure e dissenso nella Roma di Augusto (Bologna 2011); Fulvia (Naples 2013); Le custodi del potere. Donne e politica alla fine della repubblica romana (Rome 2019).

      J. Alison Rosenblitt is Senior College Lecturer in Ancient History and Director of Studies in Classics at Regent’s Park College (University of Oxford). She has published a number of articles on Latin historiography, especially Sallust’s Historiae, and on late Republican political history. She is the author of three books: E.E. Cummings’ Modernism and the Classics: Each Imperishable Stanza (Oxford University Press 2016); Rome after Sulla (Bloomsbury Academic 2019); The Beauty of Living: E.E. Cummings in the Great War (W.W. Norton 2020).

      Nathan Rosenstein is Professor Emeritus in the Department of History at The Ohio State University. His research focuses on the intersection of political culture and the Republican military and on the economic and demographic aspects of Roman warfare. He is the author or co-editor of several books, most recently Rome and the Mediterranean 290146 BC: The Imperial Republic (Edinburgh 2012). He is currently co-editor of The Oxford History of the Roman World.

      Jörg Rüpke is Fellow for Religious Studies at the Max Weber Center for Advanced Cultural and Social Studies of the University of Erfurt, Germany and its Vice-Director. He has authored several books on Roman religion, priesthood and the history of the calendar, including Pantheon (2018) and On Roman Religion (2016, 2nd ed. 2019) and has edited the Blackwell Companions to Roman Religion (2nd ed. 2011) and, together with Rubina Raja, the Archaeology of Religion in the Ancient World (2015, 2nd ed. 2020).

      Amy Russell is Associate Professor of Classics at Brown University. She is the author of The Politics of Public Space in Republican Rome (Cambridge 2016), and has also published on the tribunes of the plebs, Polybius and the city of Rome through the ages. Her latest research concerns the Senate of the imperial period.

      Eran Shalev is Associate Professor of History at the University of Haifa, Israel. He is the author of two books, Rome Reborn on Western Shores: Historical Imagination and the Creation of the American Republic (University of Virginia Press 2009) and American Zion: The Old Testament as a Political Text from the Revolution to the Civil War (Yale University Press 2012). He is currently writing a book provisionally