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Cover for 9789004251007 Cover for 9780199215973 Cover for 9780674026131 Cover for 9780674032187 Cover for 9780198117612 Cover for 9780521261807 Cover for 9780521386593
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Product Description: Societies, both ancient and modern, have frequently celebrated and proclaimed their military victories through overt public demonstrations. In the ancient world, however, the most famous examples of this come from a single culture and period - Rome in the final years of the Roman Republic and early Roman Empire - while those from other cultures - such as Egypt, Greece, Neo-Assyria, and indeed other periods of Roman history - are generally unexplored...read more
By Jeremy Armstrong (editor)

Hardcover:

9789004251007 | Brill Academic Pub, June 7, 2013, cover price $127.00 | About this edition: Societies, both ancient and modern, have frequently celebrated and proclaimed their military victories through overt public demonstrations.

cover image for 9780674032187

Hardcover:

9780674026131 | Belknap Pr, October 30, 2007, cover price $29.95

Paperback:

9780674032187 | Belknap Pr, May 31, 2009, cover price $23.00

cover image for 9780521386593
As the Roman empire declined and 'fell', contemporary glorification of the emperor's triumphal rulership reached new heights, strewing traces of the empire's perennial victory across the physical and mental landscape of late antiquity. In this, the first comprehensive study of how a great imperial ceremony actually developed and how it influenced both the eastern and western heirs to the Roman legacy, the Roman triumph's resurgence and afterlife is documented from the Tetrarchy to the end of the Macedonian dynasty in Byzantium and to Charlemagne's successors in the early medieval West. This perspective shows that celebrations of the ruler's victory experienced unceasing change in ritual form and content and that these changes mirrored broader trends in the development of society and the monarchy. At the same time, it casts new light on the late Roman origins of the trappings of early medieval kingship. Far from the imperial capital, the cult of triumphal rulership permeated local elites, as commanders in the provinces imitated the supreme victor by staging triumphs of their own, and the new Germanic kings followed suit. Classicists, medievalists, Byzantinists, specialists of art and ritual will find here new data and approaches to a central problem in the transformation of the Roman Empire which culminated in the new civilization by Byzantium and the Germanic Kingdoms. (view table of contents)

Hardcover:

9780521261807 | Cambridge Univ Pr, March 1, 1987, cover price $79.95 | About this edition: As the Roman empire declined and 'fell', contemporary glorification of the emperor's triumphal rulership reached new heights, strewing traces of the empire's perennial victory across the physical and mental landscape of late antiquity.

Paperback:

9780521386593 | Reprint edition (Cambridge Univ Pr, July 1, 1990), cover price $89.99

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