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Everything posted by Julia C
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Yeah, I think it is--at least, that's what the other pictures in that person's album tend to suggest.
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I found that on flickr there, and it's quite a stunning piece--but I have no idea who it is! Does anybody know the name of this one?
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Please include me in the drawing. Thanks!
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Well, it looks a lot like this one--and this one seems to be the most modern "definitive" Julia so far: The eyes and nose in particular are very, very similar. And there is a trace of Augustus in there, but you're right in that it doesn't look as much like him as say, portraits of Octavia. But yes, it's nice to be back. I'm always so busy so it's hard to keep track of this place sometimes.
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Oh, really? That's surprising, she looks so Claudian! I read about a head recently unearthed in Corinth that has been identified as Julia by a wide array of scholars, including some who have refused positive IDs on everything except the single Roman denarius with Gaius/Julia/Lucius on the reverse. It's interesting because that piece strongly resembles an older version of the one used in my icon, which is a relief to me since I've only ever seen this piece discussed on the internet and not in any scholarly work. It's in the Pergamon in Berlin, and I keep trying to find helpful Germans to take pictures of it from different angles but no dice. EDIT: There's also apparently a sword sheath in Bonn that has her between Gaius and Lucius--I can't find a picture of that anywhere!
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Ingsog: I don't have any problem buying provincial coins--in fact, they're probably a lot easier to find, like you said. I just want something depicting her in my possession, but coins are hard to come by and busts (reproduction or otherwise) are nonexistant. I do occasionally find a few coins online resembling both: Augustus w/Julia as Diana, or the Livia/Julia pair but they've always been sold already. I wouldn't even care if the coin was fake so long as it had a likeness of Julia on it! The 400 dollar one I mentioned earlier is gone, although the 6000 dollar one is still around--and is actually on CNG, in fact. The Augusta: I think they may have both been provincial coins, and she was on the reverse of both of them. There's no way she'd be on the obverse, agreed--I just want something with her on it. Do you know, by chance, which bust it was that was misidentified as Julia? I'm not even sute if the one in my icon is a legitimate likeness or not.
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What did the Romans ever do for the Greeks?
Julia C replied to ASCLEPIADES's topic in Imperium Romanorum
Since we're using dictionaries, here is the more authoritative Oxford English Dictionary: pan-ethnic: "Of or relating to all ethnic groups; affecting or embracing people of all ethnic backgrounds. " And here is the verb 'to collaborate': "2. spec. To co-operate traitorously with the enemy. " The Third Reich was explicitly xenophobic, which I'm sure I needn't mention. And Polybius did not engage with the Romans to subdue Greece, but was taken as a hostage and only came around to them after his social engagement to the Scipionic Circle. It's a rhetorical parlor-trick to call him a collaborationist, as it misrepresents what happens for the purpose of an emotive reaction. The same thing applies to the comparison to the Third Reich, which is wholly inappropriate and unnecessary--people were fully able to appreciate the implications of Roman imperialism before 1933. As for the sources, I'll happily get those once I check the citations made in the secondary literature I looked at pertaining to the Macedonian wars. I do have Livy 41-45, but I'm not sure what he says in it. -
Since when was the common man ever accepted to the highest echelons of power? From the start, political power was only granted to wealthy and highborn white property owners. The Americans were far more restrictive about the franchise than even the Romans were. Observe: "The mass of men are neither wise nor good, and virtue, like the other resources of a country, can only be drawn to a point and exerted by strong circumstances ably managed, or a strong government ably administered." -John Jay "The voice of the people has been said to be the voice of God; and, however generally this maxim has been quoted and believed, it is not true to fact. The people are turbulent and changing, they seldom judge or determine right. Give therefore to the first class a distinct permanent share in the government... Can a democratic assembly who annually revolve in the mass of the people be supposed steadily to pursue the public good?" - Alexander Hamilton Note, too, that the US Senate was once called the "Millionaire's Club" at the turn of the 19th century, and is fairly recent that US politicians have been dependant on corporate fundraising because they simply do not possess the funds themselves. The Bush family may be part of the old Yankee aristocracy, but it is the last of a dying breed; witness the fate of Senator Chafee of Rhode Island in 2006, or the defeat of Senator Henry Cabot Lodge Jr. to Kennedy in 1952. The American Northeastern Establishment is akin to the more conscientious sort of idealized Roman patrician--the kind that monopolizes power to itself and its progeny, but adds a strong sense of public duty and responsibility to it. Do note that this is hardly unique to America and Rome, and that these are shared features with most other polities in western history.
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Then I would wonder how reliable those old fasti are, especially with the sack in 390 and the like. The notion of later nobiles adding their names to the historical record would seem to make the most sense to me, as it's something that they would happily do. That Cicero bit there seems to suggest that sort of thing could/would have happened.
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What did the Romans ever do for the Greeks?
Julia C replied to ASCLEPIADES's topic in Imperium Romanorum
Asclepiades: Well, the Third Reich is pretty much the opposite of a pan-ethnic state, given its theories on power and organization... I objected to the term because I don't really see either of them as collaborationists, and certainly not individuals in a position to enact meaningful stage on the level of statecraft. With regards to Greek democracy being extinguished by the Romans--I would ask, what democracy? What can we say about the sad vestiges of their democratic institutions still remaining in the second century? Minerva: I wouldn't mind a verse translation if it were done properly, as the problem for me is not how entertaining they are--but how faithful to the original they are. I dislike the notion of "modernizing" a work of literature; it's like doing a cheap movie remake, regardless of the production value. The prose translation I like best is the David West version, but I will check out Knight's translation on your recommendation. I'll see if I can find an excerpt online, as my usual test is to check my favorite passages from Book I and Book VI and see how they're written. -
Ingsoc: I'm not sure I follow that line with the twelve tables--wouldn't the existence of a law forbidding intermarriage tend to strengthen the point that there was a legal distinction between the two in the early republic? And isn't the very notion of what it means to be patrician tied up with the earliest composition of the Senate? That is, if a name appears on the consular fasti in such dates, that it must by necessity be patrician even if it had lost that status later on? The patricians were the original patres, were they not? And therefore, they were the original senators. It seems counterintuitive to think otherwise, unless the whole etymology behind the word patricians is going to be overturned.
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What did the Romans ever do for the Greeks?
Julia C replied to ASCLEPIADES's topic in Imperium Romanorum
Is it really fair to call either of them Quislings, or to use blatantly nationalistic terms to describe supporters of a pan-ethnic state? The comparison to Hitler only runs one way--one cannot use Hitler to speak of the Romans, after all. His actions are not at all relevant to those of the Romans, and the appropriation of Roman ideology has been seen with almost every single western nation since. Let's not play at Godwin here. The only real way to judge the Roman conquests is to look at the evidence, objectively. As I said, the Greeks probably did not care to admit that Roman rule brought them any advantages. Deferring the matter to subjectivity is not sufficient; we are fully capable of judging for ourselves by looking at the state of Greek polities before and after Roman rule. It would seem that the general sweep of history's judgment would be inclined to agree with Virgil's poetic interpretation. -
PMs sent, let me know what you think!
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What did the Romans ever do for the Greeks?
Julia C replied to ASCLEPIADES's topic in Imperium Romanorum
Yes, the heroic couplets used by the so-called 'Augustan poets' of the 17th century destroy the poetry of the original and strain the ear, I think. I have yet to come across a translation of the -
How could he possibly be a plebeian, though? The consulship (or praetorship at that date, I suppose) was not granted to plebeians until the third century, was it not?
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What did the Romans ever do for the Greeks?
Julia C replied to ASCLEPIADES's topic in Imperium Romanorum
I've read more poetry than prose in the original Latin, so I'll use Virgil's answer: excudent alii spirantia mollius aera (credo equidem), uiuos ducent de marmore uultus, orabunt causas melius, caelique meatus describent radio et surgentia sidera dicent: tu regere imperio populos, Romane, memento (hae tibi erunt artes), pacique imponere morem, parcere subiectis et debellare superbos Good government, then, is the biggest and most important thing that the Romans provided the Greeks. -
What did the Romans ever do for the Greeks?
Julia C replied to ASCLEPIADES's topic in Imperium Romanorum
Oh, I wasn't speaking about the entire book. I'm still interested in reading it and giving it a fair engagement, but I disagree with the extreme Hellenism of that introduction. He seems to discount the authentically Roman traits that manifested themselves in the Empire; particularly, the hard-headed pragmatism they exhibited. That was a little important, I should think, as that (among other factors) sort of helped Roman civilization distinguish itself from eastern Hellenistic states and gave it a lot more staying power. -
Given the scholastic nature of the project, I'm not sure if I want to actually post my work publically. I'd be happy to PM you the 19 or so lines I have so far, with the accompanying notes and translation, if you'd like.
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In terms of transcendant historical impact, the answer is Divus Augustus. We all know why. But if we want to take a more interesting spin on the term 'greatest' and take it in a subjective personal (N.B. I mean the personal qualities of the particular Roman as expressed in the public sphere) fashion, then things become truly fun. We could come up with a shortlist of a few candidates that have a reputation for this sort of thing, some dubiously and others deserved: Publius Valerius Poplicola Lucius Junius Brutus Marcus Furius Camillus Quintus Fabius Maximus Verrucosis Cunctator Publius Cornelius Scipio Africanus Lucius Aemilius Paullus Macedonicus Publius Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus Germanicus Julius Caesar This is just a shortlist of names, but even so, we can see that the last two or three may be highly debatable on whether their personal characteristics (at least in the Roman sense) qualify them as great or not. Certainly, Aemilianus and Paullus may seem particularly repugnant to moderns, but what can we say? Should Flaminius be considered in their place? Though I am quite the Julian (well, Augustan) partisan, I feel the discussion may be far more interesting were we to jettison overall historical impact and leave both of the great Caesars by the wayside. Also, if Marcus Aemilius Scaurus did truly act as he did in McCullough's books, then I'd love to add him on the list either, but I know next to nothing about him from the actual record. Alas. I'm also amused to note that my entire shortlist consists of patricians. It perhaps resembles the little 'parade of heroes' statuary in the Forum of Augustus. L. Junius Brutus; M. Junius Brutus slew Divus Julius.
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As part of my Latin/classics degree, I have chosen to write the first 150 lines of an epic poem written about my namesake. Choosing a heroine as the subject matter is a bit non-traditional, but then again, epic is a genre that continually evolves as it goes onwards--witness the differences between Annales,
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What did the Romans ever do for the Greeks?
Julia C replied to ASCLEPIADES's topic in Imperium Romanorum
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I. Divus Augustus (yay) II. Cato (!!) III. Sulla IV. Seneca
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It's very unfortunate that my namesake has the dubious distinction of having most of her portraiture and coins destroyed. I've consequently had terrible luck finding any good coins of Julia at any of the various coin dealers I've found online, including Ebay. I've only found two, really--one of them has a decent price (around 400 dollars) but the quality is so bad that you can barely make out Julia at all. The other one I've found is of fair quality, but it's near six thousand dollars, and I can't quite justify that. I was wondering if anybody here has one available or knows where to find one. Thank you.
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I've shown the statue to one of my professors, and she says that while it looks vaguely familiar she is unable to place it.
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I found it on the image database corbis.com. Here's the url. It looks funky, but one must use the entire link--brackets and all: http://pro.corbis.com/popup/Enlargement.as...d-ca3b876003c1}