Caesar\'s Calendar. Ancient Time and the Beginnings of History (Sather Classical Lectures)

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only repeat the observation of Versnel (1994, 192) on the “awe-inspiring quantity of
studies” on the subject of the return of the Golden Age. Beside Versnel’s own study
(192 – 205), note in particular Gatz 1967, 135 – 43; Wallace-Hadrill 1982; Kubusch 1986,
91 – 147; Zanker 1988, 167 – 83; Galinsky 1996, 90 – 100.



  1. On the imperial drive to repeat these fundamental patterns in successive gen-
    erations, see Henderson 1998, 258 – 59.

  2. Above, n. 38.

  3. Momigliano 1987, 34. On the difference between the Greek use of the time of
    Cronus as a point of comparison and the Roman idea of a return, see Gatz 1967, 90,
    134 – 35; cf. Wallace-Hadrill 1982, 20 – 21.

  4. Gatz 1967, 90, 134 – 35, with reference to, for example, Arist. Ath. Pol.16.7, on
    the rule of Pisistratus as the life under Cronus. Among the overpowering bulk of stud-
    ies ofEclogue4, orientation is provided by Gatz 1967, 87 – 103; DuQuesnay 1977; Nis-
    bet 1978b; Marincic 2001; Perkell 2002, 12 – 18.

  5. DuQuesnay 1977, 72; Galinsky 1996, 92; Marincic 2001, 490.

  6. Gatz 1967, 92 – 93; Perkell 2002, 14 – 15.

  7. Munich 2003, 44.

  8. So Versnel (1994, 119), referring to the work of Weidkuhn (1977, 174 – 75), on
    a legitimacy that refers “to a mythical reality outside ours,... lying beyond the bor-
    ders of history and space, an eternal truth that existed before time but still exists behind
    it and behind our reality, and occasionally mingles with ours in ‘periods of exception’.”

  9. Macleod 1979; my thanks to Stephen Hinds for this reference.

  10. Watson 2003, ad loc. For this reading of the “Prioritätsfrage,” see Cavarzere
    1975/6, esp. 39; Horsfall 1991, 357.

  11. Especially helpful for orientation are Zanker 1988, 167 – 83; Galinsky 1996,
    90 – 100.

  12. Galinsky 1996, 90 – 91; cf. Barker 1996, 434: “a complex myth at the centre of
    a complex discourse.”

  13. Barker 1996, an important discussion, to which I am indebted throughout this
    section.

  14. Weinstock 1971, 196; Horsfall 1976, 86 – 87, with references to a possible ear-
    lier date for the Ludi, in 23 b.c.e.— though Virgil’s allusions are compatible with
    longer-range planning.
    142.Romane, memento(Aen.6.851) translates memnh'sqai, ïRwmai'eof the third line
    of the oracle (Zosimus 2.1.6). I wish Norden (1927, ad loc.) had elaborated on his
    remark that this is “eine Konkordanz, aus der sich interessante Schlüsse ziehen liessen.”
    In his note on 6.70 he detects a Virgilian anticipation of Ludi Saeculares, in honor of
    Apollo and Diana.

  15. Barker 1996, 438 – 42.

  16. Barker 1996, 443 – 46.


notes to pages 131 – 134. 271

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