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Tacitus and the Incomplete

Editat de Panayiotis Christoforou, Bram L.H. ten Berge
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 iul 2026
Widely regarded as ancient Rome’s greatest historian, Tacitus has shaped much of early modern and modern thought on Rome and its emperors. Substantial portions of his major historical works Histories and Annals, however, have not survived, depriving us of his account of crucial episodes and developments in Rome’s early imperial history. This first-of-its-kind volume seeks to fill those gaps, using a range of historical and linguistic approaches to reconstruct the missing portions of Tacitus’ work. The volume offers reconstructions of the fragmentary Tacitean emperors (Augustus, Caligula, Nero, Vespasian, Titus, and Domitian) and of important lost episodes such as the destruction of the Temple of Jerusalem and the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius.
By using the concept of incompleteness as a narrative tool, Tacitus and the Incomplete provides novel insights into what Tacitus’ oeuvre might have been like if the lost books had survived, and also expands on recent work on counterfactual historiography, the influence of hindsight on historical writing, the use of prolepsis and other narrative techniques, and on the limitations of historiography in the imperial period.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780472133703
ISBN-10: 0472133705
Pagini: 314
Ilustrații: 1 illustration
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.57 kg
Editura: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN PRESS
Colecția University of Michigan Press

Notă biografică

Panayiotis Christoforou is a Marshall Research Fellow at the Pharos Foundation, a Junior Research Fellow at New College, University of Oxford, and an Alexander von Humboldt Foundation Fellow at Technische Universität Dresden. 
Bram L. H. ten Berge is Associate Professor of Classics at Hope College. He is the author of Writing Imperial History: Tacitus from Agricola to Annales.

Cuprins

Contents
About the Contributors: vii
Introduction: A Fragmentary Tacitus | Panayiotis Christoforou and Bram L. H. ten Berge: 1
Part 1. Fragmentary or Missing Portions: Reconstructing Tacitus: 21
Completing Tacitus with Fragments: The Destruction of the Jewish Temple | Kelly Shannon-Henderson: 23
Tacitus’ Titus | Salvador Bartera: 53
Tacitus’ Domitian and Imperial (Mis)Representation | Bram L. H. ten Berge: 75
Britannia in the Histories and the Annals | David Potter: 100
Quem ad finem memorabimus? The End of Tacitus’ Annals | Ellen O’Gorman: 118
Part 2. Narrative Incompleteness: Purposeful and Suggestive Omission: 143
The Tragic Incomplete: Historical Thought in Tacitus’ Style | Holly Haynes: 145
Tacitus and Pliny on Vesuvius | Christopher Whitton: 169
Augustus in the Annals | Victoria Emma Pagán: 190
Relating at the Appropriate Time: Tacitus’ Caligula | Panayiotis Christoforou: 205
Coda: Early Modern Attempts at Filling the Gap: 237
Mind the Gap: Savile’s Bridge Between the End of Tacitus’ Annals and the Start of the Histories | Rhiannon Ash: 239
Epilogue: The Future of the Incomplete | Panayiotis Christoforou and Bram L. H. ten Berge: 261
Bibliography: 267
Index Locorum: 291

Recenzii

“The contributors to Tacitus and the Incomplete represent some of the best, most experienced, and respected current scholars of Tacitus, Roman history, and Roman historiography in the world. Together they have created a work of scholarship that manages to shed genuinely fresh light on one of the most important, widely studied Roman historians.”
“A novel and needed approach to this eminently familiar but also fragmentary and consistently evasive author. The essays in Tacitus and the Incomplete take us to the spaces beyond—and between, and hidden within—the surviving texts of the Histories and Annals, forwarding our understanding of the historian’s work and methods while also demonstrating new ways to approach incomplete texts.” 

Descriere

Reconstructions of lost episodes, narratives, and books in Tacitus' Histories and Annals