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658
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Publié par
Date de parution
01 septembre 2005
Nombre de lectures
1
EAN13
9788779349063
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
4 Mo
Publié par
Date de parution
01 septembre 2005
Nombre de lectures
1
EAN13
9788779349063
Langue
English
Poids de l'ouvrage
4 Mo
Jakob Munk Højte
Roman Imperial
Statue Bases
from Augustus to Commodus
Aarhus Univer sit y Press Aarhus Studies in
Mediterranean Antiquity
(ASMA)
VII
ASMA is a series which will be published approximately once a year by T e
Centre for the Study of Antiquity, University of Aarhus, Denmark.
T e Centre is a network of cooperating departments: Greek and Latin, Classical
Archaeology, History, and the Faculty of T eology. T e objective of the series
is to advance the interdisciplinary study of Antiquity by publishing articles,
e.g., conference papers, or independent monographs, which among other
things ref ect the current activities of the centre. JA KO B MUNK H Ø JTE
ROMAN IMPERIAL
STATUE BASES
FROM AUGUSTUS
TO COMMODUS
Acta Jutlandica LXXX:2
Humanities Series 78
a AARHUS UNIVERSITY PRESS
Roman Imperial Statue Bases
© Jakob Munk Højte and Aarhus University Press 2005
Cover: Lotte Bruun Rasmussen
Photo: Jakob Munk Højte, Caserna dei Vigili, Ostia,
Statue bases on a podium in the sacellum.
Typeset with Trajan (cover) and Mignon (body)
ISBN 87 7934 906 4
Aarhus University Press
Langelandsgade 177
DK-8200 Aarhus N
Fax: (+45) 8942 5380
73 Lime Walk
Headington, Oxford OX3 7AD
Fax: (+44) 1865 750 079
Box 511
Oakville, CT 06779
Fax: (+1) 860 945 9468
Preface
T is book is an altered and revised version of my PhD dissertation defended at
the University of Aarhus in May 2001. Due to other obligations and a certain
fatigue and nausea at the thought of taking another swing at the larcorge pora
(they do tend to have a rather musty odour), the manuscript was put in the
drawer. Earlier this year it would remain hidden no longer. Over the
summer and during a stay in Rome in the autumn, the tedious task of checking
the entries in the catalogue and editing the text was carried out. Two major
changes have been made. First of all, the three separate papers that formed
part of the dissertation: Te Epigraphic Evidence Concerning Portrait Statues
of Hadrian’s Heir L. Aelius Caesar, Imperial Visits as Occasion for the Erection
of Portrait Statues?, and T e Statue Bases of Claudius. A Reassessment of T e
Portraiture of Claudius by M. Stuart have been published elsewhere, and
are therefore not included here (see bibliography). Tis meant that a good
number of cross-references had to be sorted out and text supplied where
necessary. Secondly, the catalogue of statue bases has been revised and updated.
A number of inscriptions included in the dissertation, as pointed out by the
assessment committee, demonstrably did not belong to statue bases, and have
consequently been excluded. In addition, a number of inscriptions that seemed
too uncertain to include have also been removed. On the other hand, more
material has been published in the intervening period. T e catalogue has been
updated to include the bases mentioned in Supplementum Epigraphicum
Graecum 2000 and L’Année épigraphique 2001. In the dissertation only a minimum
of information about the individual bases went on paper, while the bulk was
stored on a CD-ROM. Here I have chosen to include more information in
the printed text, which has resulted in a rather voluminous catalogue. It is
Preface · 5
my hope that the expanded format will improve its usefulness and encourage
others to make use of the collected data, which I believe holds potential far
beyond what has been covered in this book.
Since my interest in Roman imperial statue bases was frst aroused by reading
Meriwether Stuart’s dissertation from 1938 on the portraiture of Claudius,
which includes the f rst attempt at systematically compiling and analysing the
epigraphical evidence from statue bases, many friends and colleagues have
commented and made valuable suggestions that have greatly improved the
outcome. Some require particular mention: Ittai Gradel for inspiration and
rewarding discussions. His encouragement is one of the primary reasons why
the study has been brought to completion. Niels Hannestad and Lise Hanne -
stad, my supervisor, for valuable help and advice both during and a er f my
time as a PhD student. Niels’ interest in Roman sculpture and imperial por -
traiture in particular initially got me started on this project. Robert Fleischer,
my external supervisor, for making my much too short stay in Mainz pleasant
and rewarding. More importantly for his comments on the part of my original
project, which will unfortunately have to stay in the drawer for some time
yet, namely an unf nished study of the statue bases for the Hellenistic kings.
T e external members of the assessment committee Geza Alföldy and Jane
Fejfer, who gave precise criticism and good directions for both possible and
required improvements far beyond the call of duty. I have tried as best I could
to follow their recommendations. Finally and most dearly I want to thank my
family, who have tirelessly accompanied me on countless journeys in (o en f
futile) search of statue bases.
T e book was made possible by generous f nancial support from the Un-i
versity of Aarhus, the University of Aarhus Research Foundation, Elizabeth
Munksgaard Fonden, Landsdommer V. Gieses Legat, and the Danish Research
Council for Humanities.
Århus, December 2004
Jakob Munk Højte
6 · roman imperial statue bases
Contents
Preface ............................................................ 5
List of Figures and Tables .............................. 11
Introduction ................................................... 13
Types of Monuments ........................................ 19
Identifcation of statue bases 19
Te language of the inscriptions .................................... 25
Types of statue bas ................................................. e 27
Literary testimony for imperial statue bases and inscription....... s 40
Statue types and materials used for imperial statues ................ 43
T e cost of imperial statues ......................................... 52
Damnatio memoriae and the reuse of statue bases .................. 56
Dating the Inscriptions
from Imperial Statue Bases ............................. 65
Imperial nomenclature and honorif c titles ......................... 65
Other dating criteria ................................................ 70
Dating by negative evidence ........................................ 72
Reliability of the dating criteria ..................................... 74
Dating accuracy .................................................... 77
Dates chosen for dedicating imperial statues....................... 78
Contents · 7
The Applicability of the Evidence
of the Statue Bases to the Extant Portraits 81
The Geographical Distribution
of Imperial Portrait Statues .......................... 85
T e geographical distribution of extant imperial portraits.......... 86
T e geographibution of statue bases ....................... 88
T e number of sites and the number of bases per si ............... te 103
Context ............................................................. 109
Statues Dedicated Before and After a Reign 125
Pre-accessional dedications ......................................... 125
Posthumous dedications ............................................ 132
Occasions for Erecting Imperial Statues ....... 143
Accession ........................................................... 144
Jubilees (decennalia and vicennalia) ................................ 157
Imperial visits ...................................................... 159
Patterns of chronological distribution during a reign ............... 165
Dedicators of Roman Imperial Statues ........... 167
Statues dedicated by communities or their executive bodies ........ 168
Private dedicators ................................................... 171
Public or private?179
Corporations as dedicators ......................................... 181
Military units as dedicators182
Statue bases without dedicators ..................................... 184
Regional diferences and developments ............................. 185
Conclusion ...................................................... 189
Bibliography ................................................... 195
8 · roman imperial statue bases
.
. Catalogue ................................................... 215
Introduction to the Catalogue ..................... 217
What is included? .................................................. 217
Sorting system ...................................................... 218
Geography .......................................................... 218
Chronology ......................................................... 222
Distribution maps222
Histograms ......................................................... 222
Abbreviations and Bibliography
for Catalogue ................................................. 225
Catalogue of Statue Bases
Arranged According to Emperor ........................ 229
Augustus 229 · Tiberius 263 · Caligula 288 · Claudius 294 ·
Nero 319 · Galba