God on Earth: Emperor Domitian

The re-invention of Rome at the end of the 1st century AD

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ISBN: 9789088909559
Uitgever: Sidestone Press
Verschijningsvorm: Hardcover
Auteur: Aurora Raimondi Cominesi Nathalie de Haan Eric Moormann Claire Stocks
Druk: 1
Pagina's: 190
Taal: Engels
Verschijningsjaar: 2021
NUR: Archeologie

In life, the emperor Domitian (81-96 CE) marketed himself as a god; after his assassination he was condemned to be forgotten. Nonetheless he oversaw a literary, cultural, and monumental revival on a scale not witnessed since Rome’s first emperor, Augustus.

In tandem with an exhibition in the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden in Leiden and the Mercati Traianei in Rome, planned for 2021-2022, this volume offers a fresh perspective on Domitian and his reign. This collection of papers, produced by a group of international scholars, offers a wholistic and interdisciplinary approach to the emperor and his works that begins with an overview of Rome and its imperial system and ends with a reappraisal of Domitian and his legacy.

The subject of memory sanctions after his death, Domitian’s reputation has suffered as a result of the negative press he received both in antiquity and thereafter. Building upon recent scholarship that has sought to re-evaluate the last of the Flavian emperors, the papers in this volume present the latest research on Domitian’s building programmes and military exploits as well as the literary sources produced during and after his reign, all of which paint a picture of an emperor who – despite being loathed by Rome’s elite – did much to shape the landscape of Rome as we know it today.

Contents:

Preface: Anchoring a New Emperor

André Lardinois, Ineke Sluiter

Introduction: Domitian, the Neglected Emperor Who Wished to Be God

Aurora Raimondi Cominesi, Nathalie de Haan, Eric M. Moormann & Claire Stocks

Part 1: Ruling the Empire

Emperorship and Emperors before the Flavians Came to Power

Olivier Hekster

Rome AD 69: the City at the Crossroads

Domenico Palombi

The Rise of the Flavians

Barbara Levick

Impact of Empire: Cremona, Bedriacum and Brescia

Francesca Morandini, Lilia Palmieri, Marina Volonté

Part 2: Building the Empire

Domitian’s Reshaping of Rome

Eric M. Moormann

The Arch of Titus in the Circus Maximus

Claudio Parisi Presicce

Material Culture in Britannia under Domitian; a Northern Focus

Barbara Birley, Frances McIntosh

Domitian and the Lower German Limes (The Netherlands)

Jasper de Bruin

Part 3: The Image of the Emperor

The Image of the Emperor: Seeing Domitian

Jane Fejfer

Historical Reliefs and Architecture

Paolo Liverani

The Image of the Emperor in Contemporary Epic Poetry

Claire Stocks

Imperial Women and the Dynamics of Power. Managing the Soft Power of Domitia Longina and Julia Titi

Lien Foubert

Part 4: The World of Domitian

Living Like the Emperor: A Portrayal of Domitian in his Villas and on the Palatine

Aurora Raimondi Cominesi and Claire Stocks

Between Magnificence and Misery: Living Conditions in Metropolitan Rome

Nathalie de Haan

Entertainment and Spectacle during Domitian’s Rule

Daniëlle Slootjes

Domitian and the Capitolia

Onno van Nijf, Robin van Vliet, Caroline van Toor

Archaeological Evidence from Domitian’s Palatine

Natascha Sojc

Albanum Domitiani, Domitian’s Villa in Castel Gandolfo

Claudia Valeri

Part 5: Man and God

Domitian and Religion

Frederick G. Naerebout

Master and God: Domitian’s Art and Architecture in Rome

Diane Atnally Conlin

Man and God: Literature

Antony Augoustakis, Emma Buckley

Anchoring Egypt. The Iseum Campense and Flavian Rome

Miguel John Versluys

Part 6: Fall and Afterlife Regime Change/Reputation in Antiquity

Portraiture and Memory Sanctions

Caroline Vout

Domitian and the Temples of Egypt

Olaf E. Kaper

Domitian’s Damned Memory in the Fourth and Fifth Centuries

Maria Paolo Del Moro

‘An Enemy of God’ on the Imperial Throne? The Reception of Domitian during the Middle Ages

Nine Miedema

Bibliography

Index of Names, Places, and Subjects