what legacies remain from Mommsen’s History of Rome? Mommsen’s assessments and judgements, both partial and hauntingly vivid, proved to be extremely influential in classical scholarship. It is not only the obvious qualities of his work that contributed to this, but also the fact that during Mommsen’s lifetime, because of his influence and impact, no competing projects were able to offer an alternative vision. The History of Rome is a masterful historical narrative that, thanks to its author’s brilliant capacity for organising material, had acquired enormous significance and pushed other alternative views out of the public eye. It was only in the twentieth century that research in ancient history addressed critically the dominant paradigms of interpretation which Mommsen had developed in his History of Rome. It suffices to mention Matthias Gelzer and Ronald Syme, each of whom tried to create their own response to Mommsen’s reconstruction of the Roman Republic: one, by researching not only the political and legal, but also the social system of the Roman Republic; the other, by reassessing the Roman revolution (on Mommsen and Gelzer, cf. Strauß 2017; cf. Chapter 7). No one sings the hymn that Mommsen wrote to Caesar any longer. However, the image of an incompetent ruling elite unwilling to conduct reforms, who considered themselves entitled and obliged to get rid of Caesar is, despite all the controversies, still in broad circulation. The struggle of the Italian allies against Rome is still being discussed under the slogan of Italian unity (cf. e.g. Mouritsen 1998; Chapter 23). Despite more than 150 years of intensive scholarly work on the Roman Republic and its destroyer, ancient history is still under the influence not only of Mommsen’s Römisches Staatsrecht, but also of The History of Rome (cf. Nippel and Seidensticker 2005; Hölkeskamp 2010: 27ff.; Walter 2017: 107ff.).
Theodor Mommsen’s History of Rome is a milestone on the path from an Enlightenment model of history to modern historiography. Its goal is a more scientific presentation, combined with an ‘aestheticisation’ of history. Narrative holds centre stage, but it no longer presents arguments or examples as in earlier, more rhetorical, styles of historiography. It demonstrates a methodologically correct, rationally justified reconstruction of historical continuities based on independent research: ‘Things that already happened provide the connection with things that are just taking form and are yet to be fully realised. However, even this connection is not to be assumed arbitrarily: it happened in a certain way, thus and thus, and not otherwise. It is, in its turn, an object of knowledge’ (1874: vii). Intuition or ‘divination’, as Niebuhr used to call it, were only allowed to compensate for the deficiencies of the sources, ‘their falsification and sparseness’ (Niebuhr 1843: 11).
Mommsen attempted, using the example of the history of the Roman Republic, to derive inductively some universal contexts and tendencies from the contingent events of the past. In his History of Rome he combined historical research with narrative techniques of his time. However, the claim that it depicted the historical truth and showed ‘how it all really happened’, to quote Ranke again, had no supporting structure, but was only stated categorically. Mommsen’s own judgements and evaluations played the role of a decisive criterion of truth and he attributed to them a universal validity. The usurpation of the past was employed to create a tradition.
At the same time, the book was the political manifesto of the liberal protestant bourgeoisie. The goal of the progress of world history was the unification of states. National teleology took the place of older emphases on the unfolding of sacred history. A nation is simultaneously a project and a projection. The nationalist language of modernity was looking back to the Roman Republic. Cosmopolitan reason was declared out of date. Constitution, traditions, religion, language, culture and the sphere of intellectual work were all national characteristics. Mommsen’s History of Rome stands for the historiographical appropriation of Roman history by the German bourgeoisie in the nineteenth century. As a literary work of art, it retains its irresistible fascination even today.
Mommsen’s History of Rome retains as much importance at the beginning of the twenty-first century as in the nineteenth, owing to ‘the energy, the radicalism’ with which the author ‘uncovers the unavoidable and sometimes paradoxical gap between the action and the thought, the praxis and the theory’ (Walther 2005: 241).
NOTE
1 1 The quotations from the English version of Mommsen’s Roman History follow the translation by William P. Dickson, with the first Arabic number referring to the volume, and the year of edition in square brackets (The History of Rome, 5 vols., London 1862–1866, 3rd ed. 1894/1895; single volumes quoted: vol. 1, London 1862; vol. 2, London 1862; vol. 3, London 1863; vol. 4.1, London 1866; vol. 4.2, London 1866).
FURTHER READING
For the German original of The History of Rome see Theodor Mommsen 1854–1856 and 1885. Various German editions from the nineteenth century are available on the internet as digital resources. A pocket edition in eight volumes with an excellent epilogue was published by Karl Christ, Munich 1976 (6th ed. 2001); Christ’s epilogue is also to be found in Christ 1983: 26–73. See also Theodor Mommsen 2010. The English translation by William P. Dickson 1862–1866 was reprinted in 1996 by Thoemmes Press with a short introduction by Thomas Wiedemann. The original edition is also available as an internet resource. For further (abridged) editions in English see Zangemeister 2000: 286.
This essay is founded on Rebenich 2006. Among recent studies of central aspects of Mommsen’s work should be noted Bringmann 2004, Flaig 2005, Mattenklott 2005, Walther 2001, 2005. Still important are Heuß 1988 and Meier 1982. On Mommsen’s image of Caesar see Christ 1994: 134–154. On Mommsen’s Nobel Prize, see Heinrich Schlange-Schöningen 2002, 2005. The standard biographies of Mommsen are in German: Heuß 1956, 1968, Rebenich 2007; for a short biography in English see Demandt 1990. On the historiographical and historical context of the History of Rome see especially Conrad and Conrad eds. 2002, Fulda 1996, Gossmann 1983, Gramley 2001, Hartwig 1982 and Süßmann 2000.
REFERENCES
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2 Christ, K. 1983. Römische Geschichte und Wissenschaftsgeschichte. Vol. 3. Darmstadt.
3 Christ, K. 1994. Caesar. Annäherungen an einen Diktator. Munich.
4 Conrad, C. and Conrad, S. eds. 2002. Die Nation schreiben. Geschichtswissenschaft im internationalen Vergleich. Göttingen.
5 Demandt, A. 1990. ‘Theodor Mommsen.’ In Briggs, W.W. and Calder III, W.M., eds. 1990. Classical Scholarship. A Biographical Encyclopedia. New York; London, 285–309.
6 Dickson, W.P. 1862–1866. The History of Rome, 5 vols. London (3rd ed. 1894–1895).
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8 Fowler, W.W. [1909] 1920. Theodor Mommsen. His Life and Work. A Lecture Given to the Classical Society of Edinburgh University October 20, 1909. Edinburgh (reprinted in Fowler, W.W. Roman Essays and Interpretations. Oxford 1920, 250–268).
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10 Gossman, L. 1983. Orpheus Philologus: Bachofen versus Mommsen on the Study of Antiquity. Philadelphia, PA.
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13 Hartmann, L.M. 1908. Theodor Mommsen. Eine biographische Skizze. Mit einem Anhange: Ausgewählte politische Aufsätze Mommsens. Gotha.
14 Hartwig,