A Companion to Ethnicity in the Ancient Mediterranean

(Steven Felgate) #1

452 Gary D. Farney


behind this, if not the phenomenon itself, actually existed earlier. As elsewhere, one must
be careful not to confuse intent with result: Rome was often hesitant and ambivalent (and
maddeningly over-qualifying) in its plurality. Nevertheless, it was the age of Cicero that
saw the definition of “Roman” expand well beyond just the inclusion of those people
bordering the city, at first adding those of peninsular Italy, but ultimately going well
beyond that narrow vision.


REFERENCES

Ampolo, Carmine. 1991. “Commentary.” In Anthony Molho, Kurt A. Raaflaub, and Julia Emlen,
eds.,City-States in Classical Antiquity and Medieval Italy, 116–18. Ann Arbor: University of
Michigan Press.
Ampolo, Carmine. 1996. “Roma ed i Sabini nel V secolo a.C.” In Guglielmo Maetzke and Luisa
Tamagno Perna, eds.,Identità e civiltà dei Sabini, 87–103. Florence: L.S. Olschki.
Bradley, Guy. 2000.Ancient Umbria: State, Culture and Identity in Central Italy from the Iron
Age to the Augustan Era. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Cantilena, Renata. 1996. “I Sarrasti e le monete di Nuceria Alfaterna.” In Luisa Breglia Pulci Doria,
ed.,L’incidenza dell’Antico, 319–25. Naples: Luciano.
Cornell, Timothy J. 1991. “Rome: the History of an Anachronism.” In Anthony Molho, Kurt A.
Raaflaub, and Julia Emlen, eds.,City States in Classical Antiquity and Medieval Italy, 53–69.
Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.
Del Ponte, Renato. 1999.I Liguri. Etnogenesi di un popolo. Dalla preistoria alla conquista romana.
Genoa: ECIG.
Dench, Emma. 1995.From Barbarians to New Men: Greek, Roman and Modern Perceptions of
Peoples from the Central Apennines. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Dench, Emma. 1996. “Images of Italian Austerity from Cato to Tacitus.” In Mireille
Cébeillac-Gervasoni, ed.,Les elites municipales de l’Italie péninsulaire des Gracques à Néron,
247–54. Rome: École Française de Rome.
Dench, Emma. 1998. “Austerity, Excess, Success and Failure in Hellenistic and Early Imperial
Italy.” In Maria Wyke, ed.,Parchments of Gender: Deciphering the Bodies of Antiquity, 121–46.
Oxford: Clarendon Press.
Dench, Emma. 2005.Romulus’ Asylum: Roman Identities from the Age of Alexander to the Age of
Hadrian. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Farney, Gary D. 2007.Ethnic Identity and Aristocratic Competition in Republican Rome.Cam-
bridge: Cambridge University Press.
Farney, Gary D. 2008. “The Mamilii, Mercury and theLimites: Aristocratic Genealogy and Polit-
ical Conflict in the Roman Republic.”Athenaeum, 96: 249–60.
Farney, Gary D. Forthcoming.Aristocratic Family Identity in Republican and Early Imperial
Rome.
Ferrando, Serena. 2003. “Sulle tracce del ‘lupo sannita’ con Strabone.”Maia, 55: 511–17.
Frederiksen, Martin. 1984.Campania. London: British School at Rome.
Giangiulio, Maurizio. 1991. “Filottete tra Sibari e Crotone. Osservazioni sulla tradizione letter-
aria.” In Juliette De La Genière, ed.,Épéios et Philoctète en Italie: Données Archéologiques et
Traditions légendaires, 37–53. Naples: Centre Jean Bérard.
Giangiulio, Maurizio. 1996. “Immagini coloniali dell’altro: il Mondo indigeno tra marginalità
e integrazione.” In Attilio Stazio and Stefania Ceccoli, eds.,Mito e storia in Magna Grecia,
279–303. Naples: Istituto per la storia e l’archeologia della Magna Grecia.

Free download pdf