『Episode 54. The New Dionysus: Antony, Cleopatra, and the Eastern World』のカバーアート

Episode 54. The New Dionysus: Antony, Cleopatra, and the Eastern World

Episode 54. The New Dionysus: Antony, Cleopatra, and the Eastern World

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Works CitedPrimary Sources
  • Appian. Civil Wars, Books 4–5 (c. 150 CE). The fullest surviving narrative of the period 49–31 BCE. Essential for the Sextus Pompey campaign, the confrontation with Lepidus at Messana (5.122–126), and the political narrative of the Triumvirate. Drew on sources now lost, probably including Asinius Pollio.
  • Cassius Dio. Roman History, Books 48–51 (c. 230 CE). Continuous narrative from Philippi to Actium and the Augustan settlement. More systematic than Plutarch but less vivid; Octavian-favorable. Important for the Donations of Alexandria and the reading of Antony's will.
  • Plutarch. Life of Antony (c. 100 CE). The essential biographical source. Plutarch drew on Asinius Pollio, who knew Antony personally; Dellius, who served on the Parthian campaign and wrote a memoir of it; and Antony's own memoir of the same campaign. Key passages: chapters 24–31 (Tarsus and Alexandria); 32–42 (the Triumvirate, Perusine War, Brundisium, Misenum); 50–54 (Octavia, Ventidius and Gindarus); 55–71 (the Parthian campaign); 72–75 (Donations of Alexandria).
  • Velleius Paterculus. History of Rome, Book 2 (c. 30 CE). Near-contemporary, written under Tiberius. Hostile to Antony and admiring of Octavian, but his chronology is sometimes more reliable than later sources. His brief account of the Lepidus confrontation (2.80) confirms the main outlines of Appian's narrative.
Secondary Sources
  • Goldsworthy, Adrian. Antony and Cleopatra. Yale University Press, 2010. The most thorough recent character treatment of both figures.
  • Huzar, Eleanor. Mark Antony: A Biography. University of Minnesota Press, 1978. The standard scholarly biography.
  • Roller, Duane. Cleopatra: A Biography. Oxford University Press, 2010. Essential for the Egyptian and Ptolemaic context, and particularly good on the nine-language question.
  • Syme, Ronald. The Roman Revolution. Oxford University Press, 1939. The foundational modern work on the period. Syme's argument that the Augustan propaganda apparatus has continued to shape how we understand this period is the frame for this episode.
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