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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    Mannheim :Kessler,
    UID:
    almafu_BV007460389
    Format: 267 S.
    Language: German
    Subjects: German Studies
    RVK:
    Author information: Kaiser, Georg 1878-1945
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  • 2
    Book
    Book
    Amsterdam : Querido
    UID:
    b3kat_BV012071360
    Format: 235 S.
    Language: German
    Subjects: German Studies
    RVK:
    Author information: Kaiser, Georg 1878-1945
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  • 3
    UID:
    almafu_9960850471302883
    Format: 1 online resource (xxxvi, 295 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-009-08173-X , 1-009-06381-2
    Content: At the centre of the Roman empire stood the emperor and the court surrounding him. The systematic investigation of this court in its own right, however, has been a relatively late development in the field of Roman history, and previous studies have focused on narrowly defined aspects or on particular periods of Roman history. This book makes a major contribution to understanding the history of the Roman imperial court. The first volume presents nineteen original essays covering all the major dimensions of the court from the age of Augustus to the threshold of Late Antiquity. The second volume is a collection of the ancient sources that are central to studying that court. The collection includes: translations of literary sources, inscriptions, and papyri; plans and computer visualizations of archaeological remains; and photographs of archaeologic sites and artworks depicting the emperor and his court.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 29 Sep 2022). , Cover -- Half-title -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of Figures -- List of Contributors and Contributions -- Acknowledgements -- List of Conventions -- List of Abbreviations -- List of Roman Emperors to c. AD 300 -- Register of Prominent Courtiers -- Major Authors and Literary Works Translated in this Volume -- Glossary -- Introduction: The Sources for the Roman Court -- Documentary Sources -- Eyewitness Accounts -- Literary Histories and Biographies -- Material Culture -- Continuity and Change -- 1 Conceptualizing the Roman Court -- Introduction -- I The Concept of 'Court' in the Hellenistic World -- 1.1 Aule in Homeric and Hellenistic Greek -- 1.2 Hellenistic courtiers: hoi peri ten aulen -- II The domus of the Emperor -- 1.3 The domus Augusta -- 1.4 The domus principalis -- 1.5 Tacitus on the domus principis -- 1.6 The domus divina -- III The Roman Court as aula -- 1.7 Aula applied to foreign kingdoms -- 1.8 Aula as a circle of people -- 1.9 Aula as a physical place -- IV Palatium and comitatus -- 1.10 Palatium as palace -- 1.11 A conversation in vestibulo palatii -- 1.12 Palatium as court (in a social sense) -- 1.13 The 'palatium' moves with the emperor -- 1.14 Comitatus: the emperor's travelling retinue -- 1.15 Comitatus as a centre for legal administration -- 1.16 Comitatus as a fixed centre for legal administration and record keeping -- V The Court as a Target for Moralists -- 1.17 The worries of life at court -- 1.18 The court as a place of humiliation -- 1.19 The moral turpitude of the court lifestyle -- 1.20 The court as a place of luxury and dissolute living -- 1.21 Courtiers use unscrupulous methods to gain the emperor's favour -- 1.22 Life at court as unquiet - yet seductive -- 1.23 The unnecessary pomp of court life -- VI The Court and Courtiers in Panegyrical Contexts. , 1.24 The father of Claudius Etruscus at the aula -- 1.25 Courtiers behaving well (according to Martial) -- 1.26 The court as cyclical drama -- 2 Court Spaces -- Introduction -- Roman Court Spaces and their Predecessors -- Virtual Photography: Computer Visualizations as Architectural Hypotheses -- I Hellenistic Court Spaces -- 2.1 The river ship of Ptolemy IV Philopator -- 2.2 The Ptolemaic royal district at Alexandria -- II Republican domus and villae -- 2.3 Republican elite housing: the House of the Faun at Pompeii -- 2.4 Visibility and Republican Housing -- 2.5 Cicero reflects - and moralizes - on magnificent aristocratic houses -- 2.6 The villas and gardens of Lucullus -- 2.7 Vitruvius on elite domus architecture -- 2.8 Pliny the Elder on the houses of the Republican nobility -- III Imperial Residences in Rome -- 2.9 The House of Augustus -- 2.10 The imperial residence from Tiberius to Claudius -- 2.11 Nero's Domus Aurea -- 2.12 The layout of the Flavian Palace -- 2.13 Sight-lines in the Flavian Palace -- 2.14 Spaces for otium in the Flavian Palace: the Garden Stadium -- 2.15 Martial on the Flavian Palace -- 2.16 Reimagining the Flavian Palace after Domitian -- IV Imperial Villas -- 2.17 The pleasures of villeggiatura: Marcus Aurelius on the climate at various imperial villas -- 2.18 The imperial villas on Capreae -- 2.19 Caligula's pleasure boat -- 2.20 The villa at Centumcellae -- 2.21 The villa at Tibur -- 2.22 The Villa Magna at Anagnia -- 2.23 The imperial villa at Alsium -- V Imperial Residences of the Tetrarchic Period -- 2.24 The palace at Augusta Treverorum (Trier) -- 2.25 Diocletian's palace at Spalatum (Split) -- 3 Court Relationships -- Introduction -- I Amicitia at Court -- a. Becoming a Friend of the Emperor -- 3.1 The future emperor Vitellius wins the friendship of three emperors -- 3.2 Petronius and Nero. , 3.3 An equestrian friend of Vespasian? -- 3.4 Pompeius Planta - a 'friend' of Trajan -- b. The Duties of Friends of the Emperor -- 3.5 An amicus of Titus and Vespasian: Pliny the Elder -- 3.6 The amici of Domitian gather to debate a big fish -- 3.7 The members of the consilium of Marcus Aurelius -- 3.8 Septimius Severus and his consilium hear Egyptian ambassadors -- c. Negotiating Imperial Friendship -- 3.9 Augustus' relationships with his friends -- 3.10 Trajan's friendships, according to Pliny -- 3.11 Marcus Aurelius on Antoninus Pius as a friend -- d. Terminating amicitia -- 3.12 Tiberius' advisers - and their fates -- 3.13 The future emperor Vespasian loses the favour of Nero -- 3.14 The rise and fall of Galba's amici -- 3.15 Maximinus Thrax dismisses Severus Alexander's friends -- II Cultural Patronage -- 3.16 Vergil and Augustus -- 3.17 Horace, Vergil, and Augustus -- 3.18 Seneca the Younger and Nero -- 3.19 Lucan and Nero -- 3.20 Statius and Domitian -- 3.21 Martial and Domitian -- 3.22 Martial under the principates of Nerva and Trajan -- 3.23 Hadrian's interactions with literary men -- 3.24 The cultural activities of Marcus Aurelius - and their consequences -- 3.25 Galen and Marcus Aurelius -- 3.26 Literary patronage at the court of Septimius Severus -- III Familial Relationships -- 3.27 Livia attempts to intervene with Augustus on behalf of Samos -- 3.28 Factional strife at the court of Tiberius -- 3.29 The influence of Livia receives official acknowledgement -- 3.30 Poppaea acts as a broker for Josephus -- 3.31 Pliny's praise for harmony within the imperial family -- 3.32 Plotina intervenes with Hadrian on behalf of the Epicurean school at Athens -- 3.33 Pertinax tries to keep his family out of the limelight -- 3.34 Julia Domna's influence during the reign of Caracalla. , 3.35 The persistent power of Victoria, mother of the Gallic emperor Victorinus -- 3.36 Maximinus propositions Valeria, wife of the late emperor Galerius -- IV Other Relationships of Influence and Power -- a. Domestic Workers -- 3.37 Caligula and Helicon -- 3.38 The career of C. Stertinius Xenophon -- 3.39 Epaphroditus in a brokerage role -- 3.40 The story of Felicio, the emperor's cobbler -- 3.41 An imperial servant's successful career -- 3.42 Castor: the fall of a favourite -- 3.43 Eunuchs at the court of Diocletian -- b. Astrologers -- 3.44 Tiberius and Thrasyllus -- 3.45 Nero and Balbillus -- 3.46 Vespasian and Seleucus -- 3.47 Caracalla seeks guidance on the future -- c. Sexual Partners -- 3.48 Augustus' affairs and Livia's tolerance of them -- 3.49 Acte and Nero -- 3.50 Vespasian's concubine, Caenis -- 3.51 Competition for attention from (and influence with) Elagabalus -- d. Foreign Royalty -- 3.52 The children of King Phraates IV of Parthia -- 3.53 Roman influence at the court of Herod the Great -- 3.54 Herod Agrippa I at the Roman court -- 3.55 Berenice and Titus -- 4 Rituals and Ceremonial -- Introduction -- I The salutatio -- 4.1 The beginnings of the imperial salutatio -- 4.2 The salutationes of Julio-Claudian women -- 4.3 The expectation to attend the salutatio -- 4.4 Waiting for admittance at the salutatio -- 4.5 The admissions staff -- 4.6 Hierarchy at the salutatio -- 4.7 Interactions at the salutatio -- 4.8 Informal receptions of friends -- II Special Occasions -- 4.9 Accession ceremonial -- 4.10 Celebrating accession anniversaries at court -- III Greeting the Emperor: the Imperial Kiss and adoratio -- 4.11 The custom of aristocratic kissing - and its hazards -- 4.12 Kissing the tyrant: Caligula -- 4.13 Trajan's courteous kisses -- 4.14 The politics of kissing at the Antonine court -- 4.15 Early experiments with adoratio. , 4.16 Adoratio under Diocletian -- 4.17 Adoratio for Diocletian and Maximian -- 4.18 Adoratio for Constantine -- IV The Reception of Embassies and Foreign Dignitaries -- 4.19 Caligula's reception of the Alexandrian embassies -- 4.20 Nero receives Tiridates of Armenia -- 4.21 Agrippina the Younger and the reception of embassies -- V Dining -- 4.22 Augustus dines with Vedius Pollio -- 4.23 Tiberius dines with Agrippina the Elder -- 4.24 Caligula dines with his sisters and humiliates other courtiers -- 4.25 Claudius' big dinner parties -- 4.26 Nero murders Britannicus at dinner -- 4.27 Dining Spaces in the Domus Flavia -- 4.28 Dining spaces in the Domus Augustana -- 4.29 Dining with Domitian in the palace -- 4.30 Speaking truth to power at Nerva's table -- 4.31 Trajan dines with Sura -- VI Household Religion and the Court -- 4.32 The toga virilis ceremony -- 4.33 Saturnalia celebrations and the court -- VII Public Cult and the Court -- 4.34 Religious processions: the Ara Pacis Augustae -- 4.35 Vestals at the House of Augustus -- 5 Picturing the Court -- Introduction -- I The Julio-Claudians -- 5.1 A representation of the mobile court of Augustus -- 5.2 Bringing the court home in exile: Ovid receives statuettes of Augustus, Tiberius, and Livia -- 5.3 Formal honours for the dead Germanicus -- 5.4 A Representation of Living and Dead Members of the Imperial Family -- 5.5 Public images for Sejanus - and his fall -- 5.6 Caligula and his Praetorian Guards -- 5.7 The Image of the Julio-Claudian Family: The Statue Group from the Basilica at Veleia -- 5.8 The Reception of Court Fashion in the Provinces: Agrippina the Younger -- 5.9 The statues of Octavia and Poppaea as targets of loyalty and dissidence -- II From the Flavians to the Antonines -- 5.10 The Flavian court in public relief sculpture -- 5.11 Courtiers in the public eye. , 5.12 The women of Trajan's court: Trajan's niece and grand-nieces.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781316513231
    Language: English
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  • 4
    UID:
    kobvindex_ADK262052
    Format: IV, 96 S.
    Note: Freiburg, Univ., Zulassungsarbeit zum ersten Staatsexamen für das Lehramt an Gymnasien im Fach Germanistik, 1981
    Language: Undetermined
    Keywords: Kaiser, Georg / ( )Villa Aurea ; Kaiser, Georg / ( )Villa Aurea
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  • 5
    Book
    Book
    Frankfurt/M. :Suhrkamp,
    UID:
    almafu_BV003264958
    Format: 195 S.
    Edition: 1. Aufl.
    ISBN: 3-518-01578-8
    Series Statement: Bibliothek Suhrkamp 578
    Language: German
    Subjects: German Studies
    RVK:
    Author information: Kaiser, Georg 1878-1945
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  • 6
    Book
    Book
    [Frankfurt a. M.] : Suhrkamp Verlag
    UID:
    kobvindex_ZLB12059449
    Format: 195 Seiten
    Edition: 1
    Series Statement: Bibliothek Suhrkamp 578
    Language: German
    Author information: Kaiser, Georg
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  • 7
    UID:
    gbv_567763412
    Format: [16] Bl., 478 S. , Titeleinfassung, Ill. (Holzschn.) , 16
    Uniform Title: Regimen sanitatis
    Note: Beiträger: Brasavola, Antonio; Fritsche, Markus; Spinaeus, Heinrich; Helmbold, Ludwig; Osius, Hieronymus , Signaturformel: a-b8, A-Z8, Aa-Ff8, Gg7 , Vorlageform des Erscheinungsvermerks: Anno M. D. XCIV.|| , Fernel, Jean: Emissi sanguinis observatio [EST: De vacuandi ratione, Ausz.] , Diocles: Aurea ad Antigonum Asiae regem epistola de morborum praesagiis et eorundem extemporaneis auxiliis [EST: Epistola de bona valetudine tuenda ad Antigonum regem 〈lat.〉]. Beteiligte Pers.: Cornarius, Janus; Mizauld, Antoine , De salubri diaeta Salubri 〈lat.〉. Beteiligte Pers.: Cornarius, Janus , Camerarius, Joachim d.Ä.: Victus et cultus ratio , Melanchthon, Philipp: Loci aliquot [EST: Commentarius de anima, Ausz.] , Katsch, Johannes: Nonnulla de regimine sanitatis [EST: Ex Hippocrate ac Galeno ... excerpta quaedam universis ferme hominibus ... ad sanitatem tuendam utilia]
    Additional Edition: Digitalisierte Ausg. Fernel, Jean: MEDICINA || SALERNITANA.|| ... urn:nbn:de:bvb:12-bsb10191577-2
    Additional Edition: Digitalisierte Ausg. Fernel, Jean: MEDICINA || SALERNITANA.|| ... urn:nbn:de:gbv:3:1-114376
    Additional Edition: Digitalisierte Ausg. MEDICINA || SALERNITANA.|| Id est,|| CONSERVANDAE || BONAE VALETVDINIS || praecepta.|| Cum ... ARNOLDI || VILLANOVANI in singula capita || Exegesi.|| Per IOANNEM CVRIONEM || recognita & repurgata.|| NOVA EDITIO melior ... ||(EMISSI SANGVINIS || obseruatio ex Ioannis Fernelij de || vacuandi ratione,|| cap.20.||)(DIOCLIS CARYSTII || Medici ... || aurea ad Antigonum Asiae Regem || Epistola, De morborum praesagijs et eorun-||dem extemporaneis auxilijs è Graeco Lati-||nè reddita, per Antonium Mizaldum.||)||[übers. von Janus Cornarius])(DE SALVBRI DIAETA || incerti autoris Liber ... || Iano Cornario ... interprete.||)(VICTVS ET CVLTVS RA-||tio ... || per Ioachimum || Camerarium.||)(LOCI ALIQVOT PHILIPPI || Melancht.in lib.de Anima, de modera-||tione cibi et potus ... ||)(NONNVLLA || DE REGIMINE || SANITATIS || iuxta || SEX RES NON NATV-||rales, placita ex Hippocratis & Ga||leni libris desumpta ... || PER D. IOANNEM KATZCHIVM || ... edita ... ||) s.l., 1594
    Language: Latin
    Keywords: Regimen sanitatis Salernitanum ; Krankheit ; Medizin ; Medizin
    URL: Volltext  (// 2009 digitalisiert von: Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Sachsen-Anhalt, Halle. Exemplar der ULB Sachsen-Anhalt, Halle mit der Signatur: AB 47 8/h, 25 (1))
    URL: Volltext  (// 2012 digitalisiert von: Bayerische Staatsbibliothek, München. Exemplar mit der Signatur: München, Bayerische Staatsbibliothek -- Path. 1550 d)
    Author information: Spinaeus, Heinrich
    Author information: Fernel, Jean 1497-1558
    Author information: Katsch, Johann 1538-1598
    Author information: Fritsche, Markus
    Author information: Cornarius, Janus 1500-1558
    Author information: Helmbold, Ludwig 1532-1598
    Author information: Diocles
    Author information: Mizauld, Antoine 1510-1578
    Author information: Curio, Johannes 1512-1561
    Author information: Osius, Hieronymus -1575
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  • 8
    Book
    Book
    Berlin [u.a.] : Aufbau-Verl.
    UID:
    kobvindex_SBC66500
    Format: 659 S.
    Edition: 1. Aufl.
    Note: Es ist genug , Villa Aurea , Filmskizzen , Leutnant Welzeck , Gedichte
    Language: German
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  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    UID:
    gbv_757547842
    Format: Online-Ressource (310 p)
    Edition: Online-Ausg. 2013 Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    ISBN: 9781107024014
    Content: Ostia in Late Antiquity is the first book to narrate the life of Ostia Antica, Rome's ancient harbor, during the later empire
    Note: Description based upon print version of record , Contents; Illustrations; Acknowledgments; Abbreviations; Introduction; The scope of this book; A note on the Ostian address system; Part One Background; 1 New approaches to daily life in Late Antique Ostia; Developments in post-processual archaeology; Memory in text and material culture; Beyond "Christianization"; Roman religion; Traditional Roman Religions; "Paganism"; Passing, covering, and identity management; The final frontier: Defining "religion"; 2 The new urban landscape of Romes ancient harbor; Ostias "front door" continued; Ship Sheds, Houses, and Late Antique Baths , A Collegium, a Villa, a Synagogue, and BathsThe city center; Elite Living Before Late Antiquity; The Apartments; A Glimpse at the Late Antique Economy; Civic Spaces; The dead ends of "Christian Ostia"; Part Two Foreground; 3 The third century:Roman religions and the long reach of the emperor; The third-century narrative; Ostia and the third-century narrative; The centrality of the emperor: Excavating Roman imperial cult; Domestic and workplace shrines; Beyond RELIGIO: An Amulet for Protection; Mithras at Ostia; Beneath the surface: Christianity in the third century , Reframing the Octavius of Minucius FelixOstia's Jewish community in the third century; Jewish-Christian relations in the third century; 4 The fourth century: Proud temples and resilient traditions; Narratives of the fourth century; The Early Fourth Century; The Mid-Fourth Century; The Late Fourth Century; The Late Fourth-Century "Pagan" Revival; Ostia from the third century to the fourth; Ostias Capitolium in the fourth century; Ostias Forum; The Late Antique Forum Inscriptions; Beyond the Temples and Sanctuaries; Jews and Christians in the fourth century; The Jewish Community , The Christian Community5 The fifth century: History seen from the spaces in between; Christians and Jews in fifth-century Ostia: The view from the street; The Cult of Saint Lawrence in fifth-century Ostia; Material Evidence for Saint Lawrence; Textual Evidence for Saint Lawrence; Ostia's traditional religions in the fifth century: The view from the street; The Sanctuary of Magna Mater; The Role of the Sculptural Past in the Fifth-Century Present; The Resonance of Old Dedications at Ostia; The Power of the Past; 6 The sixth and seventh centuries: A city in motion, shifting traditions , The continued visibility of traditional cultsCastor and Pollux; Isis; Vulcan; Archaeology, religion, and Roman time; Building identities around the clock; The power of martyr stories at Ostia; The power of Aurea at Ostia; Landscape, memories, and power; Postscript Looking down the road:Toward the Middle Ages; Next steps: Christians, Jews, and Muslims at Ostia; References; Index , Electronic reproduction; Available via World Wide Web
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781107334939
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781107024014
    Additional Edition: Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Ostia in Late Antiquity
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books
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  • 10
    UID:
    gbv_362438986
    Format:
    Note: Cum privilegio Regis , Vorlageform der Veröffentlichungsangabe: Lvtetiae : apud Federicum Morellum regium typographum
    Language: Latin
    Author information: Diocles Carystius
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