930 Geschichte des Altertums bis ca. 499, Archäologie
Refine
Document Type
- Part of a Book (12)
- Article (5)
- Review (4)
- Monograph/Edited Volume (3)
- Other (1)
Is part of the Bibliography
- yes (25) (remove)
Keywords
- Alte Geschichte (1)
- Ancient Rome (1)
- Antike (1)
- Antiquity (1)
- Archeology (1)
- Ausgrabung (1)
- Bestrafung (1)
- Cicero (1)
- Corrupción (1)
- Corruption, (1)
Institute
- Historisches Institut (25) (remove)
It has been highlighted many times how difficult it is to draw a boundary between gift and bribe, and how the same transfer can be interpreted in different ways according to the position of the observer and the narrative frame into which it is inserted. This also applied of course to Ancient Rome; in both the Republic and Principate lawgivers tried to define the limits of acceptable transfers and thus also to identify what we might call ‘corruption’. Yet, such definitions remained to a large extent blurred, and what was constructed was mostly a ‘code of conduct’, allowing Roman politicians to perform their own ‘honesty’ in public duty – while being aware at all times that their involvement in different kinds of transfer might be used by their opponents against them and presented as a case of ‘corrupt’ behaviour.
El artículo analiza la corrupción como un fenómeno complejo y con frecuencia ambiguo, relacionado con comportamientos y mentalidades individuales y colectivas, que son percibidos como ilegítimos o inmorales y, por lo tanto, desviados de normas establecidas. Más allá de un acercamiento reduccionista u objetivista a lugares comunes de la corrupción política, o a delitos tipificados por la ley, esta contribución pretende destacar la relevancia del análisis histórico del discurso en el estudio del tema. Este enfoque nos permite reconstruir contextos en los que se identifica la corrupción, así como analizar relatos, no siempre unánimes, sobre estas prácticas. El trabajo se adentra en una época lejana, pero a la vez cercana a nuestro tiempo, el último siglo la República romana. La evidencia nos permite evaluar críticamente aspectos fundamentales de la construcción retórica de la corrupción y de sus zonas grises, como la distinción, a menudo borrosa, entre regalo y soborno.
Sardinien
(2023)
Die antike Geschichte Sardiniens ist noch heute ein sichtbarer Bestandteil der insularen Landschaft: Nuraghen und Gräber aus der Bronzezeit, punische Nekropolen, Ruinen von römischen Städten und spätantike Kirchen, in denen man teilweise noch heute Gottesdienste feiert, prägen die zweitgrößte Insel des Mittelmeeres und überraschen die Besuchenden immer wieder aufs Neue.
Ausgewählte Stätten im Südwesten der Insel standen auf dem Reiseplan einer Exkursion von Studierenden der Universität Potsdam. Der vorliegende Reiseführer ist das Ergebnis ihrer Forschung und bietet eine kurze Beschreibung der sardischen Geschichte von der Antike bis ins 21. Jahrhundert, thematisiert die Rolle der antiken Geschichte in all ihren Facetten für die heutige sardische Identität und ordnet die größeren Orte auf der Reiseroute historisch-archäologisch ein. Detaillierte Beschreibungen von Ausgrabungsstätten, Katakomben und nuraghischen Kraftorten runden das Buch ab.
Die Beiträge wurden durch die studentischen Stipendiatinnen und Stipendiaten der Denkfabrik Scriptio Continua erarbeitet und geschrieben.
The Tetrarchy as Ideology
(2023)
The Tetrarchy as Ideology
(2023)
The 'Tetrarchy', the modern name assigned to the period of Roman history that started with the emperor Diocletian and ended with Constantine I, has been a much-studied and much-debated field of the Roman Empire. Debate, however, has focused primarily on whether it was a true 'system' of government, or rather a collection of ad-hoc measures undertaken to stabilise the empire after the troubled period of the 3rd century CE. The papers collected here aim to go beyond this question and to present an innovative approach to a fascinating period of Roman history by understanding the Tetrarchy not as a system of government, but primarily as a political language. Their focus thus lies on the language and ideology of the imperial college and court, on the performance of power in imperial ceremonies, the representation of the emperors and their enemies in the provinces of the Roman world, as well as on the afterlife of Tetrarchic power in the Constantinian period.
Introduction
(2020)
In 1932, Grace Harriet Macurdy, Professor of Greek at Vassar College, wrote about Cleopatra’s and Marc Antony’s lifestyle in Egypt: In a manner of living as though taken from the Arabian Nights Entertainment, they gambled, drank, hunted and fished together, and wandered about Alexandria by night in disguise. . . Even Macurdy – the author of a pioneering study on Hellenistic queens and ‘woman-power’, in which she stressed the necessity of evaluating powerful women by the same standards as their male counterparts – could not avoid using an Orientalist flair when describing the most famous Ptolemaic queen. It is the aim of this book to show that Macurdy was and is anything but alone, and that discourses and images developed by the Orientalist imagination have dominated the ways in which powerful ancient women have been represented in modern reception. The reason for this, we argue, is...