Julian Augustus
Platonism, myth, and the refounding of Rome
- ISBN: 9780197787519
- Editorial: Oxford University Press
- Fecha de la edición: 2026
- Lugar de la edición: Oxford. Reino Unido
- Colección: Oxford Studies in Late Antiquity
- Encuadernación: Cartoné
- Medidas: 24 cm
- Nº Pág.: 376
- Idiomas: Inglés
The Roman emperor Julian (r. 361-363 CE) was a man of action and of letters, which he employed in an effort to return the Empire to the light of the pagan gods, and reverse the Christianization of the empire advanced by his uncle Constantine and the sons of Constantine. This enterprise was inspired and guided by his conversion to the Neoplatonic philosophy and radical pagan Hellenism of Iamblichus and his disciples, and promoted by his production of Greek orations, letters, and satires. These works present a coherent vision of the providentially guided history and destiny of Rome as a series of foundations and refoundations enacted by rulers such as Romulus, Numa, and Caesar Augustus. As this book demonstrates, Julian offers an Iamblichean approach to the exegesis of the legends of Rome's founding, the allegories of Plato's dialogues, and myths of his own creation in order to articulate his own role in the refounding of the Empire. Furthermore, argues Jeremy Swist, approaching the wider examination of Julian's imperial self-image on these terms ends up nuancing and challenging common assumptions influenced by the rhetoric of his contemporary proponents. In his reverence for the gods and for philosophy, the emperor's self-construction embraces the identities of a statesman and soldier more than of a philosopher, of a Roman more than a Greek, and of a mere human rather than a semi-divine being. While distancing himself from the ideal models of philosophical virtue and imperial founding that inspire his own actions, he adopts a different set of exemplary figures as mirrors of himself.
1: The Best Possible Monarch
Philosophers and Kings: The Letter to Themistius
Programming Imperial Identity in Julian's Caesarian Works
Between Philosopher and Ruler: The "Very Good Sallust" as Counselor-Collaborator
2: Allegory, Theurgy, and Demiurgy
A Divine Right to Serve: The Hymn to King Helios
Son of the Sun? The Oration To the Cynic Heraclius
The Model of the "Model Myth": The Hymn to the Mother of the Gods
Theurgy, Demiurgy, and Refounding
3: Rome and Romanitas
Princeps Romanus Sum
True Rome and New Rome
The Sign of the Wolf: Julian's Solar Romulus
The Most Philosophical King: Numa's Foundation of Solar Religion
4: A Symposium of the Caesars
Romulus the Symposiarch
A Providential Roman History
Octavian Augustus and Julian Augustus
5: Praises of Foundation, Foundations of Praise
Refounding the Augustan Principate: Mamertinus's Consular Speech of Thanks
The Founding of Julianople: Himerius's Oration to the City and Emperor
The Return of Sunlight: Libanius and the Living Emperor
Liberator of the Roman World, Restorer of the Temples: Founding an Epigraphic Record
6: Après Julien, le déluge
From Refoundation to De-foundation: Libanius after the Emperor's Death
From Romanization to De-Romanization: Ammianus on Julian's Wasted Potential
Refounding a Legacy: Antiquity to Today
Conclusion: Dechristianizing the Dechristianizer

