L'Italie sous Odoacre et Théodoric /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Paris : Les Belles Lettres, 2020.
Description:lxxii, 175 pages ; 20 cm.
Language:French
Latin
Series:Collection des universités de France. Série latine, 0184-7155 ; volume 426
Collection des universités de France. Série latine ; v. 426.
Subject:
Format: Print Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12313400
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Varying Form of Title:Anonyme de Valois. II, Italie sous Odoacre et Théodoric
Anonyme de Valois. II, Theodericiana
Anonymi Valesiani. Pars posterior, Theodericiana
Other uniform titles:Container of (expression): Theodericiana. Latin (Festy)
Container of (expression): Theodericiana. French (Festy)
Container of (expression): Theodericiana. Latin (Festy)
Container of (expression): Theodericiana. French (Festy)
Other authors / contributors:Festy, Michel, editor, translator, writer of added commentary, writer of introduction.
Vitiello, Massimiliano, writer of introduction, writer of added commentary.
ISBN:9782251014869
2251014861
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Latin text with French translation on facing pages; introduction and notes in French
Summary:"Anonymus Valesianus II, sometimes referred to as the Pars Posterior, written after 526 and probably between 540 and 550.[4] The text, which mostly deals with the reign of the Gothic king in Italy, Theodoric the Great. The identity of the author and the circumstances of the compilation of the Pars Posterior is obscure, however a few scholars think it "based on a no longer extant chronicle by the bishop of Ravenna, Maximianus". The Pars Posterior consists of 60 chapters and it presents the chain of events as a chronicle from Chapter 36 to 59: from the rule of Emperor Zeno, through the decline of the power of Odoacer, up to the succession of Theodoric the Great in 493. In the next section, from Chapter 60 to 79, the description of the rule of Theodoric the Great - the Italian ruler of Germanic origin - can be found. Besides the description of political events the author dwells on portraying the major virtues of the ruler through different narratives. In the closing section (Chapter 80 to 96) the author describes the tragic years of Theodoric's rule.[1]The work was used by Edward Gibbon as a major source for the Roman perspective on the Ostrogothic period in his History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire"--Wikipedia

Regenstein, Room 470, Classics Reading Room

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Call Number: DG507 .I83 2020
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