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Old 02-10-2010, 07:38 PM   #71
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So any physical evidence is a requirement? What of Stateira II? Does she get a free pass by virtue of Alexander?
I love the way you go round in circles. We have substantial evidence for Alexander and that epoch, don't we? You have grounds to talk about what is in literary narratives in the context of history. :banghead::banghead:


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Old 02-10-2010, 07:55 PM   #72
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Sort of. From what basis can historiography stem?
Sort of. I indicated that we should move that to the back awhile ago though. We're probably not going to agree on it, so there's not likely to be much fruitful discussion on that front, unless we work our way back to it. It's why I started from things we would agree are relatively certain in history and tried to work backwards. I'm more interested (as I've indicated) in historiography generally. The application of History and Theory to the Journal of Roman Studies to use the examples I gave Celsus above.
So you are just wasting our time, yours and mine.

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Demonstrating what, exactly?
That you have physical evidence from which to work with.

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Okay. Then why? I'm trying to get through your reasoning on the matter.
Tether.

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Nonsense. I pointed out the problem with your application of the Ara Pacis,
Ummm, what did you point out exactly?

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I pointed out problems with your use of the Corona Civica.
You seem to be having short term memomry problems. I didn't talk about the corona civica until you mentioned it and my comment was about you trying to make something out of it. You are talking crap.

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And, to answer your second statement, I have reason to question the Corona Civica, as I indicated above I'll need more investigation. I'd still be interested in knowing where you date it.

And that I can tell some are later has very little to do with Augustus' features. It has more to do with changes in style. Other than the earlier pieces (the Capitoline Octavian is impressive and fantastically preserved), we can't even confidently state what Augustus' features really were.
I'll let you hang yourself here.

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Nope. In Florence. Though I was just a wee slip of a lad, and don't remember it terribly well.
That which visited Washington was the original. The one you saw in Florence was probably the copy.

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Nice picture of it in The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Augustus, fig.54. He looks even younger than Capitoline (it's probably earlier, but hard to date), but the features are different. Some of that is owed to the marble rather than bronze. Some is owed to artistic license.
That's nice.

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I'll cheerily grant that the earlier, more detailed sculptures are probably pretty close to the real deal. We still don't know what parts are enhanced by the chisel and what aren't, but it's at least an effort at his likeness. That doesn't bolster your claim, which was that we can observe the change in features.
So we are left with Prima Porta and Via Labicana. What a lot of cods.

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It tells me when it's after. A good enough shot to identify the hairstyle would tell me more. Still waiting on the book I mentioned.
It potentially can appear any time after 29BCE, can't it?

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I know marginally more than nothing, but still, at present count, clearly more than you
Take your eyes out of your navel.

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Nope. You can't even identify the Primaporta style. The canonical Augustus. That's what I'm basing it on.
Falling over your received terminology isn't very convincing.

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Really? Here I thought you assured me I was clueless and encouraged me to look at the available material.
You actually cribbed up and looked at some of the available material. I've got other things to do.

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If those don't imply that you aren't clueless and that you have looked at the available material, I'm not sure what does.
Well I have looked at the major pieces available.

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"Period in question?" I'm not sure what you mean by this.
Back to the gospels as evidence for gospels.

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I don't need statues to identify Augustus though. If I had no archaeology, in fact, if I had nothing except the poets and playwrights, I could still tell you that something had rocked the culture of Rome to its core.
You'd simply have literary traditions whose value you couldn't really evince because you couldn't ground it anywhere. You have to plant your potentially historical knowledge somewhere with some tangible means.


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Old 02-10-2010, 08:22 PM   #73
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So you are just wasting our time, yours and mine.
There's nothing to be gained by determining a course of historiography that is both tenable and practical?

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That you have physical evidence from which to work with.
I don't believe I ever suggested Augustus wasn't different in that respect.

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Tether.
This doesn't answer me. I'd assumed the problem of having no outside source was the circularity you are doomed to without it. You suggest that isn't the problem. So what is, in your view?

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Ummm, what did you point out exactly?
That you can't use the Ara Pacis to identify Augustus' appearance. Dig the similarity his entire family bears to him? Why do you think that is?

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You seem to be having short term memomry problems. I didn't talk about the corona civica until you mentioned it and my comment was about you trying to make something out of it. You are talking crap.
Once again your arrogance comes to bite you in the ass. The Corona Civica is the Belivacqua Augustus. It's why I was confused by whether you meant the crown or the name of the statue.

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I'll let you hang yourself here.
I'll let you try and imagine how you think I'm doing so.

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That which visited Washington was the original. The one you saw in Florence was probably the copy.
The copy is in the plaza. The one in the museum is the real deal. Remember the infamous attack on it in '92?


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It potentially can appear any time after 29BCE, can't it?
Sure can. Which is why the hair style is the capper.


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You actually cribbed up and looked at some of the available material. I've got other things to do.
And you didn't. And haven't. And consequently were never in any position to be condescending. You got caught out, that's the bottom line. Eat crow.

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Well I have looked at the major pieces available.
Good for you. That is hardly what your condescending tone implied.

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Back to the gospels as evidence for gospels.
But you ask for evidence from the "period in question," when what I think you mean is specific to the New Testament. Hence my confusion. Confusion that is amplified by the fact that above you suggest it isn't circularity, but here suggest it is.

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You'd simply have literary traditions whose value you couldn't really evince because you couldn't ground it anywhere. You have to plant your potentially historical knowledge somewhere with some tangible means.
You couldn't deduce anything historical from Virgil, for example? Horace takes it for granted that his books will appear in shops. Does that tell us nothing?
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Old 02-10-2010, 08:24 PM   #74
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I love the way you go round in circles. We have substantial evidence for Alexander and that epoch, don't we? You have grounds to talk about what is in literary narratives in the context of history. :banghead::banghead:
So what constitues evidence for "an epoch," and how far does the evidence allow us to go? They weren't rhetorical questions. I understand what you're saying just fine. I'm increasingly suspicious, however, that you haven't really thought it through beyond a rote recitation.

Put aside your near fanatical devotion to the HJ/MJ question for just one minute. Look at something outside that, solely in the light of being outside that. There is clearly a spectrum. So where, would you suggest, that spectrum begins and ends, and why? What are the markers? How far, for example, can I go from Alexander before it starts to become problematic?
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Old 02-10-2010, 09:00 PM   #75
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I love the way you go round in circles. We have substantial evidence for Alexander and that epoch, don't we? You have grounds to talk about what is in literary narratives in the context of history. :banghead::banghead:
So what constitues evidence for "an epoch," and how far does the evidence allow us to go? They weren't rhetorical questions. I understand what you're saying just fine. I'm increasingly suspicious, however, that you haven't really thought it through beyond a rote recitation.

Put aside your near fanatical devotion to the HJ/MJ question for just one minute. Look at something outside that, solely in the light of being outside that. There is clearly a spectrum. So where, would you suggest, that spectrum begins and ends, and why? What are the markers? How far, for example, can I go from Alexander before it starts to become problematic?
You can go as far as you like, Rick.


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Old 02-11-2010, 08:47 AM   #76
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For posterity's sake:

Marble bust of Octavian from the 30s BCE



And, for purely selfish reasons of my own enthrallment:

Sardonyx Cameo of Livia (c.20 BCE)



What's really neat with it isn't just the art (though the detail is incredible. The trademark double-braid has never looked so good), it's that this was clearly a collector's piece, which provides us some cultural insight. Somebody apparently thought cameos of Augustus' wife were worth collecting. Why?

Both images from Galinsky (ed) The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Augustus electronic edition. Figs. 54 and 5 respectively.
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Old 02-25-2010, 01:57 PM   #77
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You can go as far as you like, Rick.


spin
I knew. . .I *knew* I was going to regret letting you walk with this. Knew you would pop up, referencing the thread (inaccurately) in short time, declaring yourself some sort of victor.

"Evidence, tether. . .evidence, tether." The same pat answers again, and again, and again. But when pressed for the application behind them, the actual use for "evidence" that makes a given type of evidence, well, useful, you have nothing. Except to repeat yourself again, and again, and again. Saying nothing, but pretending you've said so very much.

Lay it out for me spin, show me, right here, what you contribute oh-so-substantially to discussion of historical method. Show me, starting with evidence, ending with conclusions, how anything you've said amounts to anything more than a pat answer you memorized years ago and have never been pressed on.

Not just some over simplified nonsense--"Augustus had statues therefore Augustus lived." Let's see some real history. Extrapolate as much as you can from the evidence. Let's see how far you go, how you get there, and if you actually have anything behind beyond "Because I'd like it if it worked that way."

Take your time. I'll be away for a few days, so you can really mull it over. But from what I've seen in this thread, and from what anyone is more than welcome to scroll up and see, you have no historical method. Credit where credit is due, you're very talented with texts. Which means nothing as to what you can preform as an historian.

And you're right spin, I "gleaned from [my] readings" information about Augustan statuary. You went to a museum. Anyone so inclined can scroll up and see what worked better.

While you're here, why not scroll up and see the strawman you concocted surrounding me and the historicisty of Jesus. The one you insisted you didn't engage in.
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Old 02-25-2010, 03:08 PM   #78
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Relax Rick,

I thought Spin wasn't getting what he wanted from this game, took his ball and went home.

But now I see he's baaaack, as cock-sure and dismissive as ever.

DCH
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Old 02-26-2010, 01:07 AM   #79
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You can go as far as you like, Rick.spin
I knew. . .I *knew* I was going to regret letting you walk with this. Knew you would pop up, referencing the thread (inaccurately) in short time, declaring yourself some sort of victor.
This is pretty a screwed up interpretation, Rick.

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"Evidence, tether. . .evidence, tether."
A field of history needs some hard evidence to show that there is really a field of evidence. -- But Siccius doesn't need hard evidence! :banghead:

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The same pat answers again, and again, and again.


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But when pressed for the application behind them, the actual use for "evidence" that makes a given type of evidence, well, useful, you have nothing. Except to repeat yourself again, and again, and again. Saying nothing, but pretending you've said so very much.
So you don't like the hard evidence from the early empire. I guess no evidence will make you happy. You'll find a Siccius.

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Lay it out for me spin, show me, right here, what you contribute oh-so-substantially to discussion of historical method. Show me, starting with evidence, ending with conclusions, how anything you've said amounts to anything more than a pat answer you memorized years ago and have never been pressed on.
Wot?

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Not just some over simplified nonsense--"Augustus had statues therefore Augustus lived." Let's see some real history. Extrapolate as much as you can from the evidence. Let's see how far you go, how you get there, and if you actually have anything behind beyond "Because I'd like it if it worked that way."
The statues are hard evidence. And I didn't ask you to consider them alone, but your having done so has helped show how good they are as evidence. I continue to point you to the coins, umm, coins that fit in archaeological contexts, that fit into coin sequences. Then there are inscriptions which reflect historico-archaeological contexts (such as the one at the Porta Tiburtina, a gate repaired by Titus, putting his own inscription above that of Augustus). There is hard evidence a mile for you to stick your nose up at and try to reduce to something you can ignore.

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Take your time. I'll be away for a few days, so you can really mull it over.
You'll get nothing more from me.

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And you're right spin, I "gleaned from [my] readings" information about Augustan statuary. You went to a museum. Anyone so inclined can scroll up and see what worked better.
Hang on. You still have some weird idea that because you read a few articles that you've said something about the statues?

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While you're here, why not scroll up and see the strawman you concocted surrounding me and the historicisty of Jesus. The one you insisted you didn't engage in.
I'll admit that I haven't seen much substance for conversation from you here, Rick. I'll admit that I assumed you were trying to say something substantive, because I want to read substantive argumentation. I admit now I'm not going to get any substance from you. I also admit that I don't see what you are trying to achieve here at BC&H.


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Old 02-26-2010, 01:10 AM   #80
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Relax Rick,

I thought Spin wasn't getting what he wanted from this game, took his ball and went home.
Sorry, DCH, but what was I supposed to respond to? When I found that Rick wasn't going to get back to the HJ/MJ content of the proxy OP, I wasn't too interested, but I went up and down a few garden paths with Rick.


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