The Presence of Rome in Medieval and Early Modern Britain

The Presence of Rome in Medieval and Early Modern Britain

  • Andrew Wallace
Publisher:Cambridge University PressISBN 13: 9781108853392ISBN 10: 1108853390

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The Presence of Rome in Medieval and Early Modern Britain is written by Andrew Wallace and published by Cambridge University Press. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 1108853390 (ISBN 10) and 9781108853392 (ISBN 13).

This book explores the cultural and intellectual stakes of medieval and renaissance Britain's sense of itself as living in the shadow of Rome: a city whose name could designate the ancient, fallen, quintessentially human power that had conquered and colonized Britain, and also the alternately sanctified and demonized Roman Church. Wallace takes medieval texts in a range of languages (including Latin, medieval Welsh, Old English and Old French) and places them in conversation with early modern English and humanistic Latin texts (including works by Gildas, Bede, Chaucer, Shakespeare, Bacon, St. Augustine, Dante, Erasmus, Luther and Montaigne). 'The Ordinary', 'The Self', 'The Word', and 'The Dead' are taken as compass points by which individuals lived out their orientations to, and against, Rome, isolating important dimensions of Rome's enduring ability to shape and complicate the effort to come to terms with the nature of self and the structure of human community.