Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations, Tables, and Map
Prologue
1 Father's Death
2 The Fiancé
3 At the Tribunal of Lepidus
4 Children Hoped-for
5 Preparing for Death
6 Between the Torches
7 Missing Pieces, Other Pieces
8 The Monument Itself
Appendix 1: A Brief Note on Chronology
Appendix 2: Reading Text and Translation
Bibliography
Index
Josiah Osgood is Professor of Classics at Georgetown University. He is the author of Caesar's Legacy: Civil War and the Emergence of the Roman Empire (2006) and Claudius Caesar: Image and Power in the Early Roman Empire (2011). Professor Osgood held a Rome Prize fellowship and returns to Rome to study each year.
"Osgood skillfully interweaves the story of the unnamed wife
(Turia) with those of other prominent women, mostly from senatorial
families, and allows the experience of each individual woman to
inform that of others, using both comparisons and contrasts. In
this way this discussion offers far more than a single biographical
sketch; rather, it explores the huge cultural changes of these
years in terms of the experiences of two generations of elite Roman
women.
Insightful treatments of most of the prominent women whom we know
about in the mid to late first century BC encourage a whole new way
of looking at Roman women, their social and political roles.
Meanwhile, Osgood's analysis of the famous inscription itself is
fresh, lucid, and flawless." --Harriet I. Flower, Princeton
University
"In this wonderfully learned and beautifully written book, Josiah
Osgood enables his readers to feel the transition from the Republic
to Empire through the experience of a woman of astonishing
determination, a woman who survived tragedy and abuse to save her
husband and family from great wrongs. Viewing the period from this
unique perspective, Osgood has brought these troubled years to life
in an original, persuasive, and deeply humane way." --David
Potter,
University of Michigan
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |