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Ammianus Marcellinus

 
Classical Literature Companion: Ammiānus Marcellīnus

Ammiānus Marcellīnus (c. AD 330–95), the last great Roman historian who wrote in Latin, although in fact he was a Greek born at Antioch. His history in 31 books was a continuation of the histories of Tacitus, covering the years AD 96–378, from the death of Domitian to the disastrous defeat of the Romans by the Goths at Adrianople in 378. Books 1–13 have been lost. The remaining books 14–31 deal in extreme detail with the years 353–78, covering events in his own lifetime, many of which he witnessed himself and, it is believed, reported accurately. As a young man he joined the army and served on the eastern frontier, and in Gaul under Julian (later emperor) whom he admired profoundly but not uncritically. He took part in Julian's fatal campaign in Persia and later visited Egypt and Greece. In 378 he settled in Rome, where he wrote his history; his friends included Symmachus, the leading literary figure at the time. Ammianus' narrative is interesting and enlivened by digressions—on the Egyptian obelisks and their hieroglyphics, earthquakes, lions in Mesopotamia, the artillery of his time, and includes a famous description of the Huns (31. 2). He writes largely without prejudice on the various nations dealt with, on the Christians, and on the emperors themselves. His style, which he was never fully in command of, was ornate and rhetorical, and partly based on Tacitus; it was much admired by later writers.

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Archaeology Dictionary: Ammianus Marcellinus
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One of the last great Roman historians. Originally from Antioch, born c.ad 330, he served in the army and settled in Rome c.ad 378. His History, written in Latin for a Roman audience, spanned the years ad 96 to 378. Only the section from ad 353 survives, providing an account of events and of society in the years before the barbarian incursions into the empire. Died c.ad 395.

Celtic Mythology: Ammianus Marcellinus
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Last of the great Roman historians (c. AD 330–c.390), although by birth a Greek and a native of Syrian Antioch. He is remembered by Celticists for his admiring but cautious descriptions of the Gauls, especially the tall, beautiful Gaulish women whose ‘huge snowy arms’ could strike like catapults when raised in anger. English translation in the Loeb Classical Library, Ammianus Marcellinus (Cambridge, Mass. and London, 1935–9).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Ammianus Marcellinus
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Ammianus Marcellinus (ămēā'nəs märsĭlī'nəs), c.330-c.400, Roman historian, b. Antioch. After retiring from a successful military career, he wrote a history of the Roman Empire as a sequel to that of Tacitus, his model. The history, in 31 books, covered the years from A.D. 96 to 378; only Books XIV-XXXI, covering the years A.D. 353-78, survive. Though written in an extremely rhetorical style, this reliable and impartial history is praised not only for its coverage of military events, but for detailed information concerning economic, administrative, and social history, biographical information about the various emperors, and tolerant descriptions of foreign cultures. Although a pagan and an admirer of Julian the Apostate, Ammianus was able to write about Christianity without prejudice.

Bibliography

See E. A. Thompson, Historical Work of Ammianus Marcellinus (1947); Ammianus Marcellinus (his work tr. by J. C. Rolfe 1935, repr. 1963); R. Syme, Ammianus and the Historia Augusta (1968).

Quotes By: Marcellinus Ammianus
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Quotes:

"The language of truth is unadorned and always simple."

Wikipedia: Ammianus Marcellinus
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Ammianus Marcellinus (325/330–after 391) was a fourth-century Roman historian. His is the second-to-last major historical account written during Antiquity (the last was written by Procopius). His work chronicled in Latin the history of Rome from 96 to 378, although only the sections covering the period 353–378 are extant.[1]

Contents

Biography

Ammianus was born between 325 and 330 in the Greek-speaking East,[2][1], possibly at Antioch.[3] The surviving books of his history, the 'Res Gestae', cover the years 353 to 378.[4] Ammianus served as a soldier in the army of Constantius II in Gaul and Persia.

He was "a former soldier and a Greek" (miles quondam et graecus),[5] he tells us, and his enrolment among the elite protectores domestici (household guards) shows that he was of noble birth. He entered the army at an early age, when Constantius II was emperor of the East, and was sent to serve under Ursicinus, governor of Nisibis in Mesopotamia, and magister militum.

He returned to Italy with Ursicinus, when he was recalled by Constantius, and accompanied him on the expedition against Silvanus the Frank, who had been forced by the allegedly unjust accusations of his enemies into proclaiming himself emperor in Gaul. With Ursicinus he went twice to the East. On one occasion he was separated from Ursicinus and took refuge in Amida (modern Diyarbakır) which was thereupon besieged by the Sassanid king Shapur II; he barely escaped with his life.[6] When Ursicinus lost his office and the favour of Constantius, Ammianus seems to have shared his downfall; but under Julian, Constantius's successor, he regained his position. He accompanied this emperor, for whom he expresses enthusiastic admiration, in his campaigns against the Alamanni and the Sassanids; after the death of Julian, he took part in the retreat of Jovian as far as Antioch, where he was residing when the conspiracy of Theodorus (371) was discovered and cruelly put down.

Work

At Rome, he wrote in Latin a history of the Roman empire from the accession of Nerva (96) to the death of Valens at the Battle of Adrianople (378),[7] in effect writing a continuation of the history of Tacitus. He presumably completed the work before 391, since at 22.16.12 he praises the Serapeum in Egypt as the glory of the empire, and the temple was destroyed by Christians at the end of that year. Res Gestae Libri XXXI was originally in thirty-one books, but the first thirteen are lost (Barnes argues that the original was actually thirty-six books, which would mean that nineteen books had been lost). The surviving eighteen books cover the period from 353 to 378. As a whole it has been considered extremely valuable, being a clear, comprehensive and in general impartial account of events by a contemporary. Like many ancient historians, Ammianus had a strong political and religious agenda to pursue, however, and he contrasted Constantius II with Julian to the former's constant disadvantage; like all ancient writers he was skilled in rhetoric, and this shows in his work.

Edward Gibbon judged Ammianus "an accurate and faithful guide, who composed the history of his own times without indulging the prejudices and passions which usually affect the mind of a contemporary."[8] But he also condemned Ammianus for lack of literary flair: "The coarse and undistinguishing pencil of Ammianus has delineated his bloody figures with tedious and disgusting accuracy."[9] Ernst Stein praised Ammianus as "the greatest literary genius that the world produced between Tacitus and Dante".[10]

According to Kimberly Kagan, his accounts of battles emphasize the experience of the soldiers but at the cost of ignoring the bigger picture. As a result it is difficult for the reader to understand why the battles he describes had the outcome they did.[11]

Scholars have often believed that Ammianus' work was intended for public recitation for two reasons: the overwhelming presence of accentual clausulae, which implies that it was intended to be read aloud; and epistle 1063 of Libanius to a Marcellinus of Rome which refers to public recitations. However, virtually all major works of Greek and Latin prose possessed such clausulae; and some scholars have rejected the identification of Libanius' Marcellinus with Ammianus, since Marcellinus was a very common name and the tone suggests Libanius was addressing a man much younger than himself (Ammianus was his contemporary). It is a striking fact that Ammianus, though a professional soldier, gives excellent pictures of social and economic problems, and in his attitude to the non-Roman peoples of the empire he is far more broad-minded than writers like Livy and Tacitus; his digressions on the various countries he had visited are particularly interesting.

Ammianus' work contains a detailed description of the tsunami in Alexandria which devastated the metropolis and the shores of the eastern Mediterranean on 21 July 365. His report describes accurately the characteristic sequence of earthquake, retreat of the sea and sudden giant wave.[12]

His work has suffered terribly from the manuscript transmission. Aside from the loss of the first thirteen books, the remaining eighteen are in many places corrupt and lacunose. The sole surviving manuscript from which almost every other is derived is a ninth-century Carolingian text, V, produced in Fulda from an insular exemplar. The only independent textual source for Ammianus lies in M, another ninth-century Frankish codex which was, unfortunately, unbound and placed in other codices during the fifteenth century. Only six leaves of M survive; however, the printed edition of Gelenius (G) is considered to be based on M, making it an important witness to the textual tradition of the Res Gestae.[13]

Notes

  1. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica Online - Ammianus Marcellinus
  2. ^ Illustrated Encyclopedia of the Classical World, Israel Shatzman, Michael Avi-Yonah, 1975 Harper and Row, p.37, ISBN 0060101784
    East and West Through Fifteen Centuries: Being a General History from B.C. 44 to A.D. 1453, George Frederick Young, 1916 Longmans, Green and Co, p.336
    University of California Publications in Linguistics, University of California, Berkeley, 1943 University of California Press, p.3
    Leviathan, Thomas Hobbes, Cambridge University Press, p. lxvii
  3. ^ The possibility hinges on whether he was the recipient of a surviving letter to a Marcellinus from a contemporary, Libanius - Matthews 1989: 8.
  4. ^ The Eye of Command, Kimberly Kagan, p23
  5. ^ Amm. 31.16.9
  6. ^ The Eye of Command, Kimberly Kagan pp29-30
  7. ^ The Eye of Command, Kimberly Kagan, p22
  8. ^ Gibbon, Edward, Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Chapter 26.5
  9. ^ Gibbon, Chapter 25.
  10. ^ E. Stein, Geschichte des spätrömischen Reiches, Vienna 1928
  11. ^ The Eye of Command, Kimberly Kagan, p27-9
  12. ^ Kelly, Gavin (2004): “Ammianus and the Great Tsunami”, in: The Journal of Roman Studies, 94, 141-167 (141). Note that in the fifth century BC the Greek historian Thucydides had already connected these seismic events in his Peloponnesian War(see book I, 22).
  13. ^ Clark, Text Tradition.

References and further reading

  • Scholars of Ammianus use Wolfgang Seyfarth's critical edition, Rerum gestarum libri qui supersunt (in 2 vols). Leipzig: Teubner, 1978.
  • Students often use the poor English translation of J.C. Rolfe in the Loeb Classical Library, 1935–1940 with many reprintings.
  • Walter Hamilton (trans.) The Later Roman Empire (AD 354-378). Penguin Classics, 1986. An abridged, but superior, translation.
  • Barnes, Timothy D. Ammianus Marcellinus and the Representation of Historical Reality (Cornell Studies in Classical Philology). Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1998 (hardcover, ISBN 0-8014-3526-9).
  • Clark, Charles Upson. The Text Tradition of Ammianus Marcellinus. Ph.D. Diss. Yale: 1904.
  • Crump, Gary A. Ammianus Marcellinus as a military historian. Steiner, 1975, ISBN 3515019847.
  • Drijvers, Jan and David Hunt. Late Roman World and its Historian. Routledge, 1999, ISBN 041520271X.
  • Kelly, Gavin. Ammianus Marcellinus: The Allusive Historian. Cambridge University Press, 2008, ISBN 9780521842990.
  • Matthews, J. The Roman Empire of Ammianus. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1989.
  • Rowell, Henry Thompson. Ammianus Marcellinus, soldier-historian of the late Roman Empire. University of Cincinnati, 1964.
  • Sabbah, Guy. La Méthode d'Ammien Marcellin. Paris: Les Belles Lettres, 1978.
  • Seager, Robin. Ammianus Marcellinus: Seven Studies in His Language and Thought. Univ of Missouri Pr, 1986, ISBN 0826204953.
  • Thompson, E.A. The Historical Work of Ammianus Marcellinus. London: Cambridge University Press, 1947.

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Classical Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Classical Literature. Copyright © 1993, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
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