Religion and Memory in Tacitus' Annals
Winner of the C.J. Goodwin Award of Merit 2020
Series: Oxford Classical Monographs;
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 24 January 2019
- ISBN 9780198832768
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages426 pages
- Size 237x164x30 mm
- Weight 796 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
This first book-length treatment of religion in Tacitus' Annals analyzes his numerous references to religious material through the lens of cultural memory theory, revealing them as a key vehicle for his assessment of the principate as a system of government, the activities of individual emperors, and their impact on Roman cultural identity.
MoreLong description:
Throughout his narrative of Julio-Claudian Rome in the Annals, Tacitus includes numerous references to the gods, fate, fortune, astrology, omens, temples, priests, the emperor cult, and other religious material. Though scholars have long considered Tacitus' discussion of religion of minor importance, this volume demonstrates the significance of such references to an understanding of the work as a whole by analyzing them using cultural memory theory, which views religious ritual as a key component in any society's efforts to create a lived version of the past that helps define cultural identity in the present. Tacitus, who was not only an historian, but also a member of Rome's quindecimviral priesthood, shows a marked interest in even the most detailed rituals of Roman religious life, yet his portrayal of religious material also suggests that the system is under threat with the advent of the principate. Some traditional rituals are forgotten as the shape of the Roman state changes while, simultaneously, a new form of cultic commemoration develops as deceased emperors are deified and the living emperor and his family members are treated in increasingly worshipful ways by his subjects. This study traces the deployment of religious material throughout Tacitus' narrative in order to show how he views the development of this cultic "amnesia" over time, from the reign of the cryptic, autocratic, and oddly mystical Tiberius, through Claudius' failed attempts at reviving tradition, to the final sacrilegious disasters of the impious Nero. As the first book-length treatment of religion in the Annals, it reveals how these references are a key vehicle for his assessment of the principate as a system of government, the activities of individual emperors, and their impact on Roman society and cultural identity.
Kelly Shannon-Henderson's book Religion and Memory in Tacitus' Annals offers an original and thought-provoking new way to read Tacitus' narrative of the Julio-Claudians in the context of Roman social memory and religious practice.
Table of Contents:
Introduction: Religion, Memory, and Tacitus
0.1 Religion and memory
0.2 Tacitus, priest and historian: taking the religious dimension seriously
0.3 Types of material
0.4 The structure of this study
Tiberius the Autocrat
1.1 Introduction: Tiberius perinde divina humanaque obtegens
1.2 Funeral, apotheosis, and recusatio
1.3 The use and abuse of Divus Augustus: the maiestas disease
1.4 The emergence of religious flattery
1.5 Maiestas-disease meets adulatio-disease: the trial of Libo Drusus
1.6 Tiberius controlling the triumph
1.7 Conclusions
Germanicus as Religious Interpreter
2.1 Introduction: Germanicus and religious memory
2.2 Germanicus' religious rhetoric in the German mutiny
2.3 Memoria deformes: commemorating Varus
2.4 Gods on our side? Dreams, signs, and vengeance
2.5 Germanicus abroad
2.6 Death and Piso
2.7 Conclusions
Memory and Forgetting from the Death of Germanicus to the Rise of Sejanus
3.1 Introduction
3.2 Commemoration, flattery, vengeance: Germanicus' funeral and Piso's trial
3.3 Policing traditions: the flamen dialis
3.4 Temple asylum: the Senate and cultic memory
3.5 Augusta, Fetiales, and the Senate
3.6 Conclusions
Divine Wrath and Annals 4
4.1 Fortuna, divine wrath, and the rise of Sejanus
4.2 Amnesia and memory: temples and priesthoods
4.3 Cultic memory, Augustus' deification, and Tiberius' reputation
4.4 Aftermath of the Spanish temple refusal
4.5 Withdrawal, disaster, and the perversion of ritual
4.6 Conclusions
Fate, Astrology, and the End of Life
5.1 Introduction
5.2 Commemorating Livia
5.3 Remembering Sejanus
5.4 Sibylline books: an attempt at tradition
5.5 Tiberius the astrologer
5.6 Interpreting the phoenix
5.7 Commemorating Augustus, predicting Caligula
5.8 Conclusions
Claudius and the Failure of Tradition
6.1 Introduction: what we have lost
6.2 Trials and cultic memory for a new reign: Claudius the censor
6.3 Messalina and the misuse of ritual
6.4 Rise of Agrippina: flattery and impiety
6.5 Divine anger and the rise of Agrippina and Nero
6.6 Death, astrology, and deification
6.7 Conclusions
Nero: A Narrative in Prodigies
7.1 Introduction
7.2 Kin murder and divine wrath I: Britannicus
7.3 Kin murder and divine wrath II: Agrippina
7.4 When will Nero be punished? The problems of prodigies
7.5 Octavia's death and growing adulatio
7.6 The horrible year ad 64
7.7 Impiety and misinterpretation in the Pisonian conspiracy
7.8 Fortune's playthings
7.9 Wrath of the gods
7.10 Conclusions
Conclusions
Endmatter
Bibliography
Index