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Scholarship on Roman Republican augury has previously tended towards the view that official divination was organized to tell its users what they wanted to hear. This volume argues instead that its rules did not allow humans simply to create or ignore signs at will: when human and divine will clashed it was the latter which was supposed to prevail.
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Scholarship on Roman Republican augury has previously tended towards the view that official divination was organized to tell its users what they wanted to hear. This volume argues instead that its rules did not allow humans simply to create or ignore signs at will: when human and divine will clashed it was the latter which was supposed to prevail.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 296
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. April 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 223mm x 144mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 476g
- ISBN-13: 9780198834434
- ISBN-10: 0198834438
- Artikelnr.: 54019412
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 296
- Erscheinungstermin: 28. April 2019
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 223mm x 144mm x 25mm
- Gewicht: 476g
- ISBN-13: 9780198834434
- ISBN-10: 0198834438
- Artikelnr.: 54019412
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Lindsay G. Driediger-Murphy is an Assistant Professor in Latin and Roman Social/Religious History at the University of Calgary, Canada. After completing a DPhil in Ancient History at the University of Oxford in 2011 she became a Stipendiary College Lecturer at Oriel and Jesus Colleges, Oxford, before moving back to Canada to take up her current post. Her research and teaching focus on the religious history of the ancient world.
* Frontmatter
* Texts and Abbreviations
* 0: Introduction
* 0.1: Of Gods and Men
* 0.2: Why Now?
* 0.3: What Is Needed?
* 0.4: How? Four Guiding Principles
* 1: Do As I Say, Not As I Do? Report versus Reality in Augury
* 1.1: Introduction
* 1.2: Principle 1 in the High and Late Empire: Comments on
Signification
* 1.3: Principle 1 in the High and Late Empire: Claims that Augural
Rules Gave Humans the Freedom to Accept or Reject Signs
* 1.4: Principle 1 in the Middle (and Late) Republic: Claims that Human
Awareness of Signs Determined their Validity
* 1.5: Principle 2 in the Early Principate: The Claim that Augural
Rules Gave Humans Freedom to 'Create' Signs by Reporting Them
* 1.6: Principle 2 in the Late Republic: The Claim that Humans
Contrived Auspication so as to Receive Favourable Signs and Avoid
Receiving Unfavourable Ones
* 1.7: Conclusions
* 2: Convenience or Conversation? Why 'Watching the Sky' was More than
Wishful Thinking
* 2.1: Introduction
* 2.2: What Was Sky-Watching?
* 2.3: Did Sky-Watching Invariably Produce Signs?
* 2.4: Was Sky-Watching Technically Sufficient to Prohibit Assemblies?
* 2.5: Possible Objections: The Timing of Servare de Caelo
* 2.6: But Would It Actually Work?
* Appendix: Ancient References to the Bibulus Affair
* 3: Out of Control? The Effects of Augury on Roman Public Life
* 3.1: Introduction
* 3.2: Motives, Part 1: Cicero, the Augurium Salutis, and the Limits of
our Knowledge
* 3.3: Motives, Part 2: Two Methodological Problems and Two Abdicating
Consuls
* 3.4: Motives, Part 3: The Consul, his Colleague, a Tribune, and Roman
Respect for Augury
* 3.5: The Dynamics of State Divination
* 3.6: But Did It Really Matter?
* 3.7: Conclusion: When Signs Said No
* 4: Conclusion
* Endmatter
* Bibliography
* Index Locorum
* General Index
* Texts and Abbreviations
* 0: Introduction
* 0.1: Of Gods and Men
* 0.2: Why Now?
* 0.3: What Is Needed?
* 0.4: How? Four Guiding Principles
* 1: Do As I Say, Not As I Do? Report versus Reality in Augury
* 1.1: Introduction
* 1.2: Principle 1 in the High and Late Empire: Comments on
Signification
* 1.3: Principle 1 in the High and Late Empire: Claims that Augural
Rules Gave Humans the Freedom to Accept or Reject Signs
* 1.4: Principle 1 in the Middle (and Late) Republic: Claims that Human
Awareness of Signs Determined their Validity
* 1.5: Principle 2 in the Early Principate: The Claim that Augural
Rules Gave Humans Freedom to 'Create' Signs by Reporting Them
* 1.6: Principle 2 in the Late Republic: The Claim that Humans
Contrived Auspication so as to Receive Favourable Signs and Avoid
Receiving Unfavourable Ones
* 1.7: Conclusions
* 2: Convenience or Conversation? Why 'Watching the Sky' was More than
Wishful Thinking
* 2.1: Introduction
* 2.2: What Was Sky-Watching?
* 2.3: Did Sky-Watching Invariably Produce Signs?
* 2.4: Was Sky-Watching Technically Sufficient to Prohibit Assemblies?
* 2.5: Possible Objections: The Timing of Servare de Caelo
* 2.6: But Would It Actually Work?
* Appendix: Ancient References to the Bibulus Affair
* 3: Out of Control? The Effects of Augury on Roman Public Life
* 3.1: Introduction
* 3.2: Motives, Part 1: Cicero, the Augurium Salutis, and the Limits of
our Knowledge
* 3.3: Motives, Part 2: Two Methodological Problems and Two Abdicating
Consuls
* 3.4: Motives, Part 3: The Consul, his Colleague, a Tribune, and Roman
Respect for Augury
* 3.5: The Dynamics of State Divination
* 3.6: But Did It Really Matter?
* 3.7: Conclusion: When Signs Said No
* 4: Conclusion
* Endmatter
* Bibliography
* Index Locorum
* General Index
* Frontmatter
* Texts and Abbreviations
* 0: Introduction
* 0.1: Of Gods and Men
* 0.2: Why Now?
* 0.3: What Is Needed?
* 0.4: How? Four Guiding Principles
* 1: Do As I Say, Not As I Do? Report versus Reality in Augury
* 1.1: Introduction
* 1.2: Principle 1 in the High and Late Empire: Comments on
Signification
* 1.3: Principle 1 in the High and Late Empire: Claims that Augural
Rules Gave Humans the Freedom to Accept or Reject Signs
* 1.4: Principle 1 in the Middle (and Late) Republic: Claims that Human
Awareness of Signs Determined their Validity
* 1.5: Principle 2 in the Early Principate: The Claim that Augural
Rules Gave Humans Freedom to 'Create' Signs by Reporting Them
* 1.6: Principle 2 in the Late Republic: The Claim that Humans
Contrived Auspication so as to Receive Favourable Signs and Avoid
Receiving Unfavourable Ones
* 1.7: Conclusions
* 2: Convenience or Conversation? Why 'Watching the Sky' was More than
Wishful Thinking
* 2.1: Introduction
* 2.2: What Was Sky-Watching?
* 2.3: Did Sky-Watching Invariably Produce Signs?
* 2.4: Was Sky-Watching Technically Sufficient to Prohibit Assemblies?
* 2.5: Possible Objections: The Timing of Servare de Caelo
* 2.6: But Would It Actually Work?
* Appendix: Ancient References to the Bibulus Affair
* 3: Out of Control? The Effects of Augury on Roman Public Life
* 3.1: Introduction
* 3.2: Motives, Part 1: Cicero, the Augurium Salutis, and the Limits of
our Knowledge
* 3.3: Motives, Part 2: Two Methodological Problems and Two Abdicating
Consuls
* 3.4: Motives, Part 3: The Consul, his Colleague, a Tribune, and Roman
Respect for Augury
* 3.5: The Dynamics of State Divination
* 3.6: But Did It Really Matter?
* 3.7: Conclusion: When Signs Said No
* 4: Conclusion
* Endmatter
* Bibliography
* Index Locorum
* General Index
* Texts and Abbreviations
* 0: Introduction
* 0.1: Of Gods and Men
* 0.2: Why Now?
* 0.3: What Is Needed?
* 0.4: How? Four Guiding Principles
* 1: Do As I Say, Not As I Do? Report versus Reality in Augury
* 1.1: Introduction
* 1.2: Principle 1 in the High and Late Empire: Comments on
Signification
* 1.3: Principle 1 in the High and Late Empire: Claims that Augural
Rules Gave Humans the Freedom to Accept or Reject Signs
* 1.4: Principle 1 in the Middle (and Late) Republic: Claims that Human
Awareness of Signs Determined their Validity
* 1.5: Principle 2 in the Early Principate: The Claim that Augural
Rules Gave Humans Freedom to 'Create' Signs by Reporting Them
* 1.6: Principle 2 in the Late Republic: The Claim that Humans
Contrived Auspication so as to Receive Favourable Signs and Avoid
Receiving Unfavourable Ones
* 1.7: Conclusions
* 2: Convenience or Conversation? Why 'Watching the Sky' was More than
Wishful Thinking
* 2.1: Introduction
* 2.2: What Was Sky-Watching?
* 2.3: Did Sky-Watching Invariably Produce Signs?
* 2.4: Was Sky-Watching Technically Sufficient to Prohibit Assemblies?
* 2.5: Possible Objections: The Timing of Servare de Caelo
* 2.6: But Would It Actually Work?
* Appendix: Ancient References to the Bibulus Affair
* 3: Out of Control? The Effects of Augury on Roman Public Life
* 3.1: Introduction
* 3.2: Motives, Part 1: Cicero, the Augurium Salutis, and the Limits of
our Knowledge
* 3.3: Motives, Part 2: Two Methodological Problems and Two Abdicating
Consuls
* 3.4: Motives, Part 3: The Consul, his Colleague, a Tribune, and Roman
Respect for Augury
* 3.5: The Dynamics of State Divination
* 3.6: But Did It Really Matter?
* 3.7: Conclusion: When Signs Said No
* 4: Conclusion
* Endmatter
* Bibliography
* Index Locorum
* General Index