『Episode 55. Actium: The End of the Republic and the Hellenistic World』のカバーアート

Episode 55. Actium: The End of the Republic and the Hellenistic World

Episode 55. Actium: The End of the Republic and the Hellenistic World

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Works CitedPrimary Sources
  • Cassius Dio. Roman History, Books 50–51. The fullest ancient narrative of Actium; read with awareness of the Augustan shadow.
  • Horace. Odes 1.37 (the Cleopatra ode). The most complex poetic response to the battle and its aftermath.
  • Plutarch. Life of Antony, chapters 60–86. The essential account of the final years, Actium, and the deaths.
  • Suetonius. Life of Augustus. Essential for Augustus's own account of his constitutional arrangements and the Eutychus anecdote.
  • Tacitus. Annals, Book 1 opening. The indispensable counter-reading; the most compressed and precise analysis of what the principate actually was.
  • Virgil. Aeneid, Book 8. The shield of Aeneas; the Augustan ideological framework at its most artistically powerful.
Secondary Sources
  • Carter, John. The Battle of Actium. Hamish Hamilton, 1970. The most focused scholarly treatment of the battle itself and the strategic question of what the plan actually was.
  • Goldsworthy, Adrian. Augustus: First Emperor of Rome. Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 2014. The best modern biography; presents the principate as improvised rather than planned, which is probably closer to the truth.
  • Roller, Duane. Cleopatra: A Biography. Oxford University Press, 2010. The most scholarly modern treatment; essential on the question of the asp versus prepared poison.
  • Schiff, Stacy. Cleopatra: A Life. Little, Brown, 2010. The most readable modern account; particularly strong on Cleopatra's death and the sources' disagreements about it.
  • Syme, Ronald. The Roman Revolution. Oxford University Press, 1939. The foundational modern analysis of how Augustus built his power; still indispensable after eighty years.
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