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Divine Qualities: Cult And Community In Republican Rome
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Divine Qualities: Cult And Community In Republican Rome in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $205.37

Coles
Divine Qualities: Cult And Community In Republican Rome in Brampton, ON
By None
Current price: $205.37
Loading Inventory...
Size: Hardcover
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This book explores an aspect of how Romans thought about themselves. Its subject is ''divine qualities'': qualities like Concord, Faith, Hope, Clemency, Fortune, Freedom, Piety, and Victory, which received public cult in Rome in the Republican period. Anna Clark draws on a wide range of evidence
(literature, drama, coins, architecture, inscriptions and graffiti) to show that these qualities were not simply given cult because they were intrinsically important to ''Romans''. They rather became ''Roman'' through claims, counter-claims, appropriations and explorations of them by different
individuals. The resources brought into existence by cult (temples, altars, coin images, statues, passwords, votive inscriptions) were visible and accessible to a broad range of people. Divine qualities were relevant to a broader social spectrum than is usually recognized, and this has important
consequences for our understanding of Roman society.
This book explores an aspect of how Romans thought about themselves. Its subject is ''divine qualities'': qualities like Concord, Faith, Hope, Clemency, Fortune, Freedom, Piety, and Victory, which received public cult in Rome in the Republican period. Anna Clark draws on a wide range of evidence
(literature, drama, coins, architecture, inscriptions and graffiti) to show that these qualities were not simply given cult because they were intrinsically important to ''Romans''. They rather became ''Roman'' through claims, counter-claims, appropriations and explorations of them by different
individuals. The resources brought into existence by cult (temples, altars, coin images, statues, passwords, votive inscriptions) were visible and accessible to a broad range of people. Divine qualities were relevant to a broader social spectrum than is usually recognized, and this has important
consequences for our understanding of Roman society.





















