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How was news reported, and by whom throughout the age of the Roman Emp


kre8tv

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I'm new here and a relatively new student of Roman history. I'm turning to this wise forum for advice and directions. What was the title of the individual who would report news to Romans of their empire's latest conquests? Was it always delivered first as a spoken-word account? Was it always in a public place?

 

Any details or useful links are appreciated.

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Although there are more modern works which may now disagree with some aspects of this explanation as a start you may find this article from A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890) by William Smith, LLD on the cursus publicus of interest.

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Here's some contemporary news reporting on a major breaking story, as told by Polybius a generation later.

 

"On the news of the defeat reaching Rome, the civic leaders were unable to suppress or soften reporting of the facts because of the scale of the disaster. [A Roman defeat by Hannibal]. Therefore they summoned a meeting of the people to announce it. Therefore the Praetor mounted the Rostra and stated 'we have been defeated in a great battle.'"

 

The Acta appears to have been in imperial innovation. By and large, news would seem to have been propagated by the old fashioned method of public announcements (especially at public ceremonies) and posting notices. We have some of these notices surviving from Pompeii for scheduled gladiator games.

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I'm new here and a relatively new student of Roman history. I'm turning to this wise forum for advice and directions. What was the title of the individual who would report news to Romans of their empire's latest conquests? Was it always delivered first as a spoken-word account? Was it always in a public place?

 

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(To echo what Ghost said) I loved the performance of Ian McNeice as the senate crier in the HBO series "Rome."

 

I don't know whether the following information is correct:

 

Newsreader (Senate Crier) (fictional), played by Ian McNeice. The closest [HBO series]"Rome" comes to a narrator, and the mouthpiece for pieces of plot exposition not fully explained. The Newsreader announces daily the pronouncements of the Senate, public service announcements, business advertisements, and the current events of the Republic to the people in the Forum. He often uses dramatic gesticulations when using names of important Romans, like Gaius Julius Caesar. All these pronouncements would also
Edited by guy
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Is the signed photo yours, Guy?

 

No. :lol:

 

 

guy also known as gaius

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