The political transformation that took place at the end of the
Roman Republic was a particularly rich area for analysis by the
era's historians. Major narrators chronicled the crisis that saw
the end of the Roman Republic and the changes that gave birth to a
new political system. These writers drew significantly on the Roman
idea of
virtus as a way of interpreting and understanding
their past.
Tracing how
virtus informed Roman thought over time,
Catalina Balmaceda explores the concept and its manifestations in
the narratives of four successive Latin historians who span the
late Republic and early Principate: Sallust, Livy, Velleius, and
Tacitus. Balmaceda demonstrates that
virtus in these
historical narratives served as a form of self-definition that
fostered and propagated a new model of the ideal Roman more fitting
to imperial times. As a crucial moral and political concept,
virtus worked as a key idea in the complex system of Roman
sociocultural values and norms that underpinned Roman attitudes
about both present and past. This book offers a reappraisal of the
historians as promoters of change and continuity in the political
culture of both the Republic and the Empire.