A Companion to Ostrogothic Italy

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The Heroine and the Historian 313


Gregory of Tours, Histories, ed. B. Krusch/W. Levinson, Gregorii Episcopi Turonensis
Historiarum Libri X (Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Scriptores Rerum
Merovingicarum 1.1), Hannover 1937.
Jordanes, Getica, ed. T. Mommsen, Iordanis Romana et Getica (Monumenta Germaniae
Historica, Auctores Antiquissimi 5), Berlin 1882.
Malchus of Philadelphia, ed. and trans. R.C. Blockley, The Fragmentary Classicizing
Historians of the Later Roman Empire, vol. 2, Liverpool 1981.
Procopius, Secret History, trans. H.B. Dewing, Procopius: Secret History (Loeb Classical
Library), Cambridge 1935.
——— , Wars, trans. H.B. Dewing, History of the Wars, 5 vols. (Loeb Classical Library),
Cambridge 1914–28.
Zosimus, Nova Historia, trans. J.J. Buchanan/H.T. Davis, Zosimus, Historia Nova: The
Decline of Rome, San Antonio 1967.


Secondary Literature
Amory, P., People and Identity in Ostrogothic Italy, 489–554, Cambridge 1997.
Arnold, J., Theoderic and the Roman Imperial Restoration, Cambridge 2014.
Brown, T.S., Gentlemen and Officers: Imperial Administration and Aristocratic Power in
Byzantine Italy AD 554–800, Rome 1984.
Brubaker, L., “Sex, Lies, and Textuality: The Secret History of Prokopios and the Rhetoric
of Gender in Sixth-Century Byzantium,” in L. Brubaker and J. Smith (eds.), Gender in
the Early Medieval World: East and West, 300–900, Cambridge 2004, pp. 83–101.
Cameron, A., Procopius and the Sixth Century, London 1985.
Conant, J.P., Staying Roman: Conquest and Identity in Africa and the Mediterranean,
439–700, Cambridge 2012.
Cooper, K., “Insinuations of Womanly Influence: An Aspect of the Christianization of
the Roman Aristocracy”, JRS 82 (1992), 150–64.
———, ‘Empress and Theotokos: Gender and Patronage in the Christolological
Controversy’, in R.N. Swanson (ed.), The Church and Mary, Woodbridge, 2004,
pp. 39–51.
Daily, E.T., Queens, Consorts, Concubines: Gregory of Tours and the Women of the
Merovingian Elite, Leiden 2015.
Fauvinet-Ranson, V., “Portrait d’une regent: Une panégyrique d’Amalsonthe
(Cassiodore, Variae 11, 1)”, Cassiodorus 4 (1998), 267–308.
Frankforter, A.D., “Amalasuntha, Procopius and a Woman’s Place”, Journal of Women’s
History 8 (1996), 41–57.
Gillett, A., “The Mirror of Jordanes: Concepts of the Barbarian, Then and Now”, in
P. Rousseau (ed.), A Companion to Late Antiquity, Chichester 2009, 392–408.
Goffart, W., The Narrators of Barbarian History (AD 550–800), Princeton 1988.

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