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Niebuhr's lectures on Roman history, Vol. 3 (of 3) cover

Niebuhr's lectures on Roman history, Vol. 3 (of 3)

Chapter 33: FINE ARTS AND LITERATURE.
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About This Book

A sequence of scholarly lectures maps the political landscape of the Mediterranean world as then known, surveys legal and institutional developments, and recounts major military campaigns including anti‑piracy operations and wars in the East and West. The narrative traces the careers and actions of leading Roman figures, treats the Catiline conspiracy and Cicero’s consulship and exile, and follows Julius Caesar from his early rise through the Gallic wars and the civil conflict with Pompey to his Egyptian, African, and Spanish campaigns. Attention is given to resulting legislation, veteran settlements, and shifts in provincial and imperial administration.

FINE ARTS AND LITERATURE.

Of the fifth century some buildings are still preserved. The noble church of St. Paul, although built up by the robbery of other fabrics, was yet in a grand style, and put together with much taste: the robbery is described in a statute of the emperor Majorian who forbade it. A hundred and fifty years ago, there still existed, in the church of S. Agata di Goti, a mosaic from which it appeared that this church was built and dedicated by Ricimer.

But the history of the Roman nation is not yet run out, although the Romans have ceased to be a state. Even literature survives, not only in Rome, but also at Ravenna. We have still a number of small detached poems, epitaphs, inscriptions on churches, many of which are ingenious and fine: one can see that the times were not yet barbarous. Boëthius was worthy of the best ages of literature. To the seventh and the eighth centuries belong several of the schoolmen who are left to us; for instance, Acron and Porphyrio. The Roman law continued to be much more decidedly in force than is generally believed. A description of the lingering influence of the Roman mind would be highly interesting and much to be desired.