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E-raamat: Staging the World: Spoils, Captives, and Representations in the Roman Triumphal Procession [Oxford Scholarship Online e-raamatud]

(Assistant Professor, Department of Historical Studies University of Gothenburg)
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Staging the World is an illustrated study of the Roman triumphal procession in its capacity as spectacle and performance. Ida Ostenberg analyses how Rome presented and perceived the defeated on parade. Spoils, captives, and representations are the objects, and the basic questions to be asked concern both contents and context: What was displayed? How was it paraded? What was the response? The triumph was a crowded civic celebration, when spectators met with coins from Spain and Asia, Jewish temple treasures, silver plate and furniture from opulent royal feasts, trees from eastern gardens, Punic elephants appearing as in battle, kings, long known by name only, and ferocious barbarians dressed in outlandish costumes. Ostenberg aims to show what stories the Roman triumph told about the defeated and what ideas it transmitted about Rome itself.
Figures
x
Abbreviations xii
Introduction
1(18)
Previous Studies
2(4)
Looking at Procession as Performance
6(6)
Rome: Stage and Spectators
12(2)
Methods and Sources
14(5)
Spoils
19(109)
Arms, Army Equipment, Artillery
19(27)
Ships and Rams
46(12)
Coins and Bullion
58(21)
Statues and Paintings
79(12)
Art and Valuables
91(28)
Golden Crowns
119(9)
Captives
128(61)
Prisoners
128(35)
Hostages
163(5)
Animals
168(16)
Trees
184(5)
Representations
189(73)
Representations and `Triumphal Paintings'
189(10)
Cities and Towns
199(16)
Peoples and Rivers
215(30)
War Scenes
245(17)
Staging the World
262(31)
Parading World Order
262(10)
Messages and Meanings
272(21)
Bibliography 293(24)
Index 317
Ida Ostenberg is Assistant Professor, Department of Historical Studies, University of Gothenburg.