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Livy

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Title: Livy


1
Livys Monumentum
2
(Lewis Short)
  • monumentum (monim- ), i, n. moneo),
  • I. select that which preserves the remembrance
    of any thing, a memorial, a monument esp. of
    buildings, statues, galleries, tombs erected to
    perpetuate the remembrance of a person or thing
    cf. Paul. ex Fest. p. 139 Müll.

3
Ancient Authors use the term
  • Varro (1st Cent B.C.) Physical reminders in the
    present day, of the past, which teach a lesson.
    His examples are graves and their inscriptions
    that advise the living. (Varro De Lingua Latina
    6.49)
  • Otherwise mentioned and discussed by Cato (fr.
    83P), Suetonius (Tib.2.1-2), Pliny the Elder (NH
    21.6), Ovid and Cicero.

4
  • Jaeger (1997)
  • A physical thing or delineated space,
    distinguished with the intent of carrying some
    message into the future. Monumenta are a
    Janus-like phenomena which look both into the
    past as well as the future immortalizing past
    events and preserving an important Lesson or
    Value for the future. Monumenta have some common
    characteristics.
  • An absent person or thing commemorated.
  • A present audience reminded.
  • A memory or an exhortation that is socially
    relevant
  • A meaning determined jointly by the reminder, its
    physical context and the circumstances of each
    viewer.
  • Miles (1995)
  • Monuments were survivals from the past for which
    they provide evidence. Livy explicitly refers to
    them as incorruptus, but tacitly points admits
    that they are also susceptible distortion. His
    supposed unbroken link with the past available
    for inspection in three forms
  • the intentional
  • the unintentional
  • the literary

5
  • Wiseman (1986)
  • The foundations of aetiological stories, used as
    a physical validation of the truth of historians
    writing. Monumenta spawn fabulae.
  • These were especially important before the
    Samnite Wars.
  • Stories based off of interpreting monumenta, were
    not necessarily true. Livy (38.56.2)

Bonfante (1998) Monuments are the physical
survival of memory. The visual/physical world of
Rome is the embodiment of its traditions. Livy
in specific sees monuments as large architectural
objects, as well as literary works which are
described metaphorically as architectural
objects.
6
What is a Monumentum?
Past
Future
7
MONUMENTUM LIVII
Praef (6), Praef (10),1.12, 1.13,1 1.36, 1.45,
1.48, 1.55, 2.33, 2.40, 4.7, 4.10, 4.16, 4.24,
5.30, 5.52, 6.1, 6.20, 6.28, 6.29, 7.21, 7.3,
8.11, 8.40, 9.18, 10.15, 10.2, 23.20, 25.39,
26.24, 26.41, 29.37, 30.28, 31.30, 31.29, 37.6,
31.30, 31.29, 37.6, 38.56 (4x), 38.57, 38.53,
39.37, 39.40, 45.27
8
Type 1 The Constructed Monument
  • Non inviderunt laude sua mulieribus viri
    Romaniadeo sine obtrectatione gloriae alienae
    vivebatur 12 , monumentoque quod esset,
    templum Fortunae muliebri aedificatum
    dedicatumque est. (2.40.11-12)
  •  
  • The Roman men did not begrudge the women due
    regard truly it survived without the detraction
    of foreign praise, so that it would be a reminder
    (literally a monument), a temple was built and
    dedicated to Lady Fortuna.
  • Other examples 1.36, 1.55, 2.33, 2.40, 5.30

9
Type 2 Monumentalized Space
  • 7 foedum inhumanumque inde traditur scelus,
    monumentoque locus est. Sceleratum vicum vocant.
    (1.48.7)
  • The foul and inhuman crime from that place is
    related, and the location is a monument. They
    call it Crime Street.
  • Other Examples 1.13, 4.16

10
Type 3 Monuments of Words
  • 10 hoc illud est praecipue in cognitione rerum
    salubre ac frugiferum, omnis te exempli documenta
    in inlustri posita monumento intueri (praef. 10)
  • This is especially fruitful and beneficial in
    recognition of events, that you consider every
    example set down in brilliant monument.
  • Stories that arent written down are Fabulae
  • Other Examples 4.7, 6.1

11
Final Thoughts
  • Monuments are Physical Things which remind people
    of past events, both good and bad, and arent
    necessarily constructed.
  • Is this so much different from how we look at the
    world today?
  • Livys Monumenta in a way is the an attempt to
    turn the entire city of Rome into a Monument.
  • In many ways much like an artifact.

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16
  • Works Cited (The most useful works are bold
    font).
  •  
  • Chaplin, Jane D. 2000. Livys Exemplary History.
    Oxford Oxford University Press.
  • Bonfante, Larissa. 1998. Livy and the Monuments
    in Meir Lubetski, Claire Gottlieb, Sharon R.
    Keller, ed., Boundaries of the Ancient Near
    Eastern World A tribute to Cyrus H.Gordon.
    Sheffield Sheffield Academic Press.
  • Feldherr, Andrew. 1998. Spectacle and Society in
    Livys History. Berkeley University of
    California Press.
  • Jaegar, Mary. 1997. Livys written Rome. Ann
    Arbor University of Michigan Press.
  • Miles, Gary B. 1995. Livy, Reconstructing Early
    Rome. Ithaca, NY Cornell University Press.
  • Sailor, Dylan. 2006. Dirty Linen, Fabrication ,
    and the Authorities of Livy and Augustus. In
    Transactions of the American Philological
    Association 136.2 (329-388).
  • Wiseman, T.P. 1986. Monuments and the Roman
    annalists. In I.S. Moxon, J.D. Smart, A.J.
    Woodman, ed., Past Perspectives Studies in Greek
    and Roman Historical Writing. Cambridge
    Cambridge University Press.
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