>
The Divinization of Caesar and Augustus: Precedents, Consequences, Implications

The Divinization of Caesar and Augustus: Precedents, Consequences, Implications

  • £60.99
  • Save £32


Michael Koortbojian
Cambridge University Press, 10/31/2013
EAN 9780521192156, ISBN10: 0521192153

Hardcover, 360 pages, 26 x 18.5 x 2 cm
Language: English

This book examines the new institution of divinization that emerged as a political phenomenon at the end of the Roman Republic with the deification of Julius Caesar. Michael Koortbojian addresses the myriad problems related to Caesar's, and subsequently Augustus', divinization, in a sequence of studies devoted to the complex character of the new imperial system. These investigations focus on the broad spectrum of forms - monumental, epigraphic, numismatic, and those of social ritual - used to represent the most novel imperial institutions: divinization, a monarchial princeps, and a hereditary dynasty. Throughout, political and religious iconography is enlisted to serve in the study of these new Roman institutions, from their slow emergence to their gradual evolution and finally their eventual conventionalization.

1. Making men gods
2. The question of Caesar's divinity and the problem of his cult statue
3. Augural images
old traditions and new institutions
4. Romulus, Quirinus, genius, divus
5. Caesar's portrait and the Simulacrum Divi Iulii
6. Auspicious, propitious, victorious
7. Representation in an era of divinization
8. Ad urbem et ex urbe
the imagery of the divus and its fate
9. Coda
reverberations in the east.