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  1. [Authors and titles are listed at the end of the review.] [The reviewer apologizes for the lateness of this review.] The four editors of this book will be very familiar to scholars of Ammianus as the co-authors, since 1987, of the indispensible “Dutch commentaries” on the Res Gestae. 1 This volume collects papers delivered at a 2005 conference that marked the completion of the commentaries ...

    • Peter O'brien
  2. Sep 26, 2023 · This short volume is very informative about the Emperor Julian and his attempt to restore traditional Roman worship - very scholarly but very short; given how much of what Julian write has actually survived it seems to me this could have been a much longer book.

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    • Philip Freeman
  3. Sep 25, 2013 · One of them is the part from 360 to 364, which is from when Julian was declared Emperor by the roman army in Paris where his own Some info on emperor Julian (the apostate) Help

  4. Arguments Of Celsus, Porphyry, And The Emperor Julian, Against The ChristiansRelating to the Jews, Together with an Appendix by Taylor, Thomas is a Project Gutenberg book, now on Github. - Argumen...

  5. Feb 5, 2015 · Later in the century, a second Roman emperor, Numerianus, was also captured, but killed immediately: ‘They flayed him and made his skin into a sack. And they treated it with myrh [to preserve it] and kept it as an object of exceptional splendour.’14 Whether this was also Valerian’s fate, or whether he was kept on the floor or the wall, the sources don’t say.

  6. Nov 1, 2004 · Follow the author. Julian's Against the Galileans Hardcover – November 1, 2004. Flavius Claudius Julianus, better known to history by the name imposed by his Christian opponents, Julian "the Apostate," was a nephew of the first Christian emperor, Constantine I. Julian is one of the most fascinating figures of late antiquity.

    • Julian Emperor Of Rome
  7. Aug 12, 2003 · “High entertainment.” — The New York Times Book Review “A subtle, provoking, enthralling book. . . . Vidal’s ability to invoke a world is amazing.” — The Christian Science Monitor “Simply great. . . . A truly monumental novel.”

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