21H.336 | Spring 2023 | Undergraduate

The Making of a Roman Emperor

Course Description

Through close examination of the emperor Augustus and his Julio-Claudian successors, this subject investigates how Roman emperors used art, architecture, coinage, and other media to create and project an image of themselves, how the surviving literary sources from the Roman period reinforced or subverted that image, …
Through close examination of the emperor Augustus and his Julio-Claudian successors, this subject investigates how Roman emperors used art, architecture, coinage, and other media to create and project an image of themselves, how the surviving literary sources from the Roman period reinforced or subverted that image, and how both phenomena have contributed to post-classical perceptions of Roman emperors. It also considers works of Suetonius and Tacitus as well as modern representations of the emperors such as those found in the films I, Claudius, Quo Vadis, and HBO’s Rome series.

Course Info

Learning Resource Types
Written Assignments
Readings
Lecture Notes
This painting depicts Emperor Augustus, seated and wearing a white and red toga, pointing at a man seated across from him.
The Emperor Augustus Rebuking Cornelius Cinna for His Treachery, an 1814 painting by Étienne-Jean Delécluze. (This image is in the public domain. Source: Wikimedia Commons.)