Veni, vidi, scripsi : écrire l’histoire dans l’Antiquité

This volume collects together papers based on the fruitful exchanges that occurred during the first three years of the research seminar “Historiographies antiques” (Ancient Historiographies) – organized at the École normale supérieure of Paris and Lyon II University (France). It aims at giving acces...

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description This volume collects together papers based on the fruitful exchanges that occurred during the first three years of the research seminar “Historiographies antiques” (Ancient Historiographies) – organized at the École normale supérieure of Paris and Lyon II University (France). It aims at giving access to French speaking readers to a better understanding of the way history was written in ancient times, from classical Athens to late-Antiquity scholiasts. Accordingly, following a consistent introduction by M. Bellissime and P. Duchêne, presenting the lastest research developments in this topic, ten contributions provide illustration cases that are, as ancient historians themselves, at a crossroad between history and literature. On the historical side, G. Van Heems explores the question of the sources and A. Jayat details the construction of a speech. In addition, F. Galtier, then O. Devillers focuse on the treatment of a major event, i.e. the death of an emperor. On the literary side, M. Simon, then I. Cogitore and L. Autin study the role of echoes in the global meaning of historical texts, respectively through references to religious matters and in speeches given by women. D. Barcat and A. Pulice both show how the whole structure of a work could be designed, whereas P. Ponchon and R. Cytermann analyze the elements defining the genre. By publishing together contributions by well-established leading researchers and new generations of scholars, this volume is also proof of the vitality and the interest of this research field in France.
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spelling doab-20.500.12854ir-806152024-04-02T14:00:13Z Veni, vidi, scripsi : écrire l’histoire dans l’Antiquité Duchêne, Pauline Bellissime, Marion ancient historiography ancient history ancient literature rhetorics ancient Rome ancient Greece Livy Cassius Dio Tacitus Suetonius Plutarch gender studies,Herodotus,Thucydides,Cicero,scholia,narration,Otho,Tiberius,ValeriusPublicola,Roman religion Caesar emperor’s death literary genre thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHB General and world history This volume collects together papers based on the fruitful exchanges that occurred during the first three years of the research seminar “Historiographies antiques” (Ancient Historiographies) – organized at the École normale supérieure of Paris and Lyon II University (France). It aims at giving access to French speaking readers to a better understanding of the way history was written in ancient times, from classical Athens to late-Antiquity scholiasts. Accordingly, following a consistent introduction by M. Bellissime and P. Duchêne, presenting the lastest research developments in this topic, ten contributions provide illustration cases that are, as ancient historians themselves, at a crossroad between history and literature. On the historical side, G. Van Heems explores the question of the sources and A. Jayat details the construction of a speech. In addition, F. Galtier, then O. Devillers focuse on the treatment of a major event, i.e. the death of an emperor. On the literary side, M. Simon, then I. Cogitore and L. Autin study the role of echoes in the global meaning of historical texts, respectively through references to religious matters and in speeches given by women. D. Barcat and A. Pulice both show how the whole structure of a work could be designed, whereas P. Ponchon and R. Cytermann analyze the elements defining the genre. By publishing together contributions by well-established leading researchers and new generations of scholars, this volume is also proof of the vitality and the interest of this research field in France. 2022-04-06T10:09:28Z 2022-04-06T10:09:28Z 2021 book ONIX_20220406_9782356133793_5 741-1818 9782356133793 9782356133816 9782356133809 https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/80615 fre eng PrimaLun@ image/png Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International https://una-editions.fr/veni-vidi-scripsi/ https://ressources.una-editions.fr/s/mDeTXiEpWAdFxkz Ausonius Éditions Pôle Production Imprimé, Université Bordeaux Montaigne 10.46608/primaluna7.9782356133793 This volume collects together papers based on the fruitful exchanges that occurred during the first three years of the research seminar “Historiographies antiques” (Ancient Historiographies) – organized at the École normale supérieure of Paris and Lyon II University (France). It aims at giving access to French speaking readers to a better understanding of the way history was written in ancient times, from classical Athens to late-Antiquity scholiasts. Accordingly, following a consistent introduction by M. Bellissime and P. Duchêne, presenting the lastest research developments in this topic, ten contributions provide illustration cases that are, as ancient historians themselves, at a crossroad between history and literature. On the historical side, G. Van Heems explores the question of the sources and A. Jayat details the construction of a speech. In addition, F. Galtier, then O. Devillers focuse on the treatment of a major event, i.e. the death of an emperor. On the literary side, M. Simon, then I. Cogitore and L. Autin study the role of echoes in the global meaning of historical texts, respectively through references to religious matters and in speeches given by women. D. Barcat and A. Pulice both show how the whole structure of a work could be designed, whereas P. Ponchon and R. Cytermann analyze the elements defining the genre. By publishing together contributions by well-established leading researchers and new generations of scholars, this volume is also proof of the vitality and the interest of this research field in France. 10.46608/primaluna7.9782356133793 bfc06fa5-0f79-4168-bed3-99215f2f51e2 9782356133793 9782356133816 9782356133809 Pôle Production Imprimé, Université Bordeaux Montaigne 7 202 Pessac open access
spellingShingle ancient historiography
ancient history
ancient literature
rhetorics
ancient Rome
ancient Greece
Livy
Cassius Dio
Tacitus
Suetonius
Plutarch
gender studies,Herodotus,Thucydides,Cicero,scholia,narration,Otho,Tiberius,ValeriusPublicola,Roman
religion
Caesar
emperor’s death
literary genre
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHB General and world history
Veni, vidi, scripsi : écrire l’histoire dans l’Antiquité
title Veni, vidi, scripsi : écrire l’histoire dans l’Antiquité
title_full Veni, vidi, scripsi : écrire l’histoire dans l’Antiquité
title_fullStr Veni, vidi, scripsi : écrire l’histoire dans l’Antiquité
title_full_unstemmed Veni, vidi, scripsi : écrire l’histoire dans l’Antiquité
title_short Veni, vidi, scripsi : écrire l’histoire dans l’Antiquité
title_sort veni vidi scripsi ecrire l histoire dans l antiquite
topic ancient historiography
ancient history
ancient literature
rhetorics
ancient Rome
ancient Greece
Livy
Cassius Dio
Tacitus
Suetonius
Plutarch
gender studies,Herodotus,Thucydides,Cicero,scholia,narration,Otho,Tiberius,ValeriusPublicola,Roman
religion
Caesar
emperor’s death
literary genre
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHB General and world history
topic_facet ancient historiography
ancient history
ancient literature
rhetorics
ancient Rome
ancient Greece
Livy
Cassius Dio
Tacitus
Suetonius
Plutarch
gender studies,Herodotus,Thucydides,Cicero,scholia,narration,Otho,Tiberius,ValeriusPublicola,Roman
religion
Caesar
emperor’s death
literary genre
thema EDItEUR::N History and Archaeology::NH History::NHB General and world history
url ONIX_20220406_9782356133793_5