Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- Introduction -- Sallust, the lector eruditus and the Purposes of History -- The Audience of Latin Historical Works in the First Century BCE in Light of Geographical Descriptions -- Livy, the Reader Involved, and the Audience of Roman Historiography -- From ἐqήdjvlw to oίojvlw: Thucydides’ Readership in the ὑsropήoaxa from the Roman Period -- Historiography in the Margins and the Reader as a Touchstone -- A History in Letters? The Intersection of Epistolarity and Historiography in Pliny -- Readership and Reading Practices of Ancient History in the Early Roman Empire: Tacitus’ Accessions of Tiberius and Nero as a Case Study in Affective Historiography -- Reading Spaces, Observing Spectators in Tacitus’ Histories -- How to Satisfy Everyone: Diverse Readerly Expectations and Multiple Authorial Personae in Arrian’s Anabasis -- Multiple Authors and Puzzled Readers in the Historia Augusta -- Index locorum -- Index nominum et rerum.
Mi l lennium pursues an interdisciplinary approach transcending historical eras. The international editorial board and the advisory board represent a wide range of disciplines - contributions from art and literary studies are just as welcome as historical, theological and philosophical disciplines; contributions on Latin and Greek cultures just as welcome as on Oriental cultures..