How to be a bad emperor : an ancient guide to truly terrible leaders /

Suetonius, approximately 69-approximately 122,

How to be a bad emperor : an ancient guide to truly terrible leaders / Suetonius ; selected, translated, and introduced by Josiah Osgood. - xxi, 288 pages ; 18 cm. - Ancient wisdom for modern readers . - Ancient wisdom for modern readers. .

Includes bibliographical references.

Introduction -- Ignore bad omens, and your wife. Divine Julius 76-82.3 -- Spend all your time at your resort. Tiberius 38-67 -- Make your horse a consul. Gaius Caligula 22-35 and 50-55 -- Fiddle while Rome burns. Nero 20-25 and 40-50.

"Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus was secretary of correspondence for the emperor Hadrian and author of the multi-part biography, Lives of the Caesars. A landmark in the development of realistic biography-writing, this work gives an account of twelve emperors, beginning with Julius Caesar. In each biography, Suetonius moves beyond the great events of Roman history and sets out to reveal the small and telling details of his subjects' lives. Suetonius' zeal in accumulating and relating what may appear to be trivial has sometimes led to the charge that he was little better than a gossip. Yet he was interested in deeper questions that fascinate political observers today. It is Suetonius' view that emperors ultimately had the power to achieve much both for good and for ill. Augustus beautified Rome, improved its infrastructure, restored its religion, and promoted discipline in the army. But other emperors, such as Tiberius, Caligula, and Nero, infamously used their power to indulge vice and harm others. Ever since their publication, Suetonius' imperial biographies have appealed to readers, both because of their sensational stories and the larger questions of power they raise. They spawned many sequels in antiquity (as well as more recent works like Robert Graves's famed, I, Claudius). While a number of good English translations are in print, reading Lives of the Caesar from cover to cover can be daunting, so many details are included. Also general readers, including students, are really interested in the stories of the bad emperors. This book, then, in a reversal of the usual self-help formula that Suetonius would appreciate, offers selections from the lives of four bad emperors (Julius Caesar, Tiberius, Caligula, and Nero) to create a guide on how to be a bad leader. own worst qualities and become more dangerous to us than any enemy. Osgood will start the volume with an introduction to Suetonius and his biographies, and also include introductions and (as appropriate, epilogues) to the individual selections. These will offer a reader already acquainted with Suetonius a better sense of the biographer's achievement and value as well as some ideas on why autocrats, or would-be autocrats, have always proven a rich subject for biographers"--


Parallel English and Latin text. "I have based the Latin text in this book on M. Ihm's Teubner edition of 1908 ... I have followed Kaster [Oxford, 2016] at several points ... where his proposed reading strikes me as significant improvement on Ihm."--Pages 287-288,

9780691193991 0691193991

2019026869

GBB9J4586 bnb

019633459 Uk


Emperors--Rome--Biography--Early works to 1800.


Rome--History--Empire, 30 B.C.-476 A.D.


Biographies.

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