Buch, Englisch, Band 1, 376 Seiten, Format (B × H): 169 mm x 247 mm, Gewicht: 1030 g
Reihe: Intersections
Buch, Englisch, Band 1, 376 Seiten, Format (B × H): 169 mm x 247 mm, Gewicht: 1030 g
Reihe: Intersections
ISBN: 978-90-04-12051-8
Verlag: Brill
This volume deals with the question: how did scholars and artists in the early modern period represent, or rather, recreate (Greek and Roman) history? It appears that ancient history was not just studied so as to reconstruct the past, it was used as a way of understanding and legitimizing the present.
Sixteen authors from various disciplines have studied the works of scholars and artists in different media so as to reveal how they used ancient history as a rich field of raw material, that could be used, recycled and adapted to new needs and purposes.
The studies in this volume are important for historians of the early modern period from all disciplines, and for all those interested in the reception of classical antiquity.
Contributors include: Maria Berbera, Jan Bloemendal, Anton Boschloo, Jeanine De Landtsheer, Jan L. de Jong, Karl Enenkel, Marc Laureys, Olga van Marion, Alicia Montoya, Mark Morford, Bettina Noak, Sjaak Onderdelinden, Paul Smith, Wilfried Stroh, Francesca Terrenato, Arnoud Visser, and Bart Westerweel.
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Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface
1. The Representation of History in Artistic Theory in the Early Modern Period, Anton Boschloo
2. Universals and Particulars. History Painting in the “Sala di Costantino” in the Vatican Palace, Jan L. de Jong
3. Theatrum Hodiernae Vitae: Lipsius, Vaenius and the Rebellion of Civilis, Mark Morford
4. Strange and Bewildering Antiquity: Lipsius’s Dialogue Saturnales sermones on Gladiatorial Games (1582), Karl Enenkel
5. Justus Lipsius’s De militia Romana: Polybius Revived or How an Ancient Historian was Turned into a Manual of Early Modern Warfare, Jeanine De Landtsheer
6. “The Grandeur that was Rome”: Scholarly Analysis and Pious Awe in Lipsius’s Admiranda, Marc Laureys
7. Civic Self-Offering: Some Renaissance Representations of Marcus Curtius, Maria Berbara
8. Montaigne, Plutarch and Historiography, Paul J. Smith
9. Plutarch’s Lives and Coriolanus: Shakespeare’s View of Roman History, Bart Westerweel
10. The Reception of Plutarch in the Netherlands: Octavia and Cleopatra in the Heroic Epistles of J.B. Wellekens (1710), Olga van Marion
11. The Reception of Plutarch in Friedrich Schiller’s Lectures on Solon and Lycurgus’s Legislation, Sjaak Onderdelinden
12. Marc Anton ironisch? Zu Form und Erfindung seiner Leichenrede in Shakespeares Julius Caesar, Wilfried Stroh
13. The Uses of Ancient History in the Emblems of Joannes Sambucus (1531–1584), Arnoud Visser
14. The Emperor Hadrian as an Artist in Karel van Mander’s Schilder-boeck, Francesca Terrenato
15. Tyrant or Stoic Hero? Marc-Antoine Muret’s Julius Caesar, Jan Bloemendal
16. Caesar the Father in Marie-Anne Barbier’s La mort de César (1709), Alicia Montoya
17. The Dutch Republic between Hauteur and Greed — Lambert van den Bosch and his Drama L. Catilina, Bettina Noak
List of Illustrations
Index
List of Contributors