Book contents
- The Roman Republic and Political Culture
- Classical Scholarship in Translation
- The Roman Republic and Political Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Original Essays
- Part II Translations
- Chapter 4 Benevolence and Freedom
- Chapter 5 Capitol, Comitium, and Forum
- Chapter 6 Face to Face with the Ancestors
- Chapter 7 Rituals of Integration in the Roman Republic
- Chapter 8 The Message of the Medium
- Chapter 9 The memoria of the gentes as the Backbone of Collective Memory in Republican Rome
- Chapter 10 The Ritual Grammar of Institutionalized Politics
- Chapter 11 Aristocratic Roles and the Crisis of the Roman Republic
- Chapter 12 Monuments and Consensus
- Chapter 13 Publicity or Participation?
Chapter 8 - The Message of the Medium
Historiography’s Potential to Create Meaning in the Context of Roman History Culture during the Republic
from Part II - Translations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 January 2025
- The Roman Republic and Political Culture
- Classical Scholarship in Translation
- The Roman Republic and Political Culture
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Part I Original Essays
- Part II Translations
- Chapter 4 Benevolence and Freedom
- Chapter 5 Capitol, Comitium, and Forum
- Chapter 6 Face to Face with the Ancestors
- Chapter 7 Rituals of Integration in the Roman Republic
- Chapter 8 The Message of the Medium
- Chapter 9 The memoria of the gentes as the Backbone of Collective Memory in Republican Rome
- Chapter 10 The Ritual Grammar of Institutionalized Politics
- Chapter 11 Aristocratic Roles and the Crisis of the Roman Republic
- Chapter 12 Monuments and Consensus
- Chapter 13 Publicity or Participation?
Summary
Uwe Walter explains how memoria in Rome was rooted in institutions vital to the res publica. Many of these were embedded in an oral context with highly suggestive settings – public speech, the theatre, festival performances, among others. Hence, they had only a limited capacity to store memories and preserve them over time. In similar fashion, buildings and monuments were subject to decay, and with their splendour their memorial force vanished. Historiography was of a different quality. Fabius Pictor attempted to create a unified memory of the res publica, distilled and synthesized from multiple individual and collective repositories of memory across a variety of media – and charged with the authority of the senatorial voice. Two concluding case studies illustrate how Walter envisions the relation between narrative synthesis and the production of meaning: one, the case of L. Marcius Septimus, lower commander during the Punic Wars; and the other the highly politicized episode of ten high-ranking prisoners released after the battle of Cannae by Hannibal on their word of honour that they would raise a ransom in Rome in exchange for their comrades. Each tradition integrated different elements of memory to generate a qualitatively new knowledge of past events.
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- The Roman Republic and Political CultureGerman Scholarship in Translation, pp. 225 - 271Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025