Classics 229 - The Tyrant and Gladiator: Bad Roman Emperors from Caligula to Commodus

Bad Roman Emperors

Fall
2020
01
4.00
Geoffrey Sumi
M 08:00AM-09:15AM;TTH 08:00AM-09:00AM;WF 08:00AM-09:45AM
Mount Holyoke College
111660
gsumi@mtholyoke.edu
111660,111716
Caligula was a god (or so he thought); Nero fiddled while Rome burned; Commodus dressed as a gladiator and fought man and beast in the arena. The history of the Roman empire is replete with scandalous stories about eccentric and even insane emperors whose reigns raise questions about the nature of the emperor's power and his role in administering the empire. In this course a close study of Roman imperial biography and historiography--the source of so many of these stories of bad emperors--will be weighed against documentary and archaeological evidence in order to reveal the dynamic between the emperor, his court, and his subjects that was fundamental to the political culture of imperial Rome.
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