Galla Placidia: The Last Roman EmpressThe astonishing career of Galla Placidia (c. 390-450) provides valuable reflections on the state of the Roman empire in the fifth century CE. In an age when emperors, like Galla's two brothers, Arcadius (395-408) and Honorius (395-423), and nephew, Theodosius II (408-450), hardly ever ventured beyond the fortified enclosure of their palaces, Galla spent years wandering across Italy, Gaul and Spain first as hostage in the camp of Alaric the Goth, and then as wife of Alaric's successor. In exile at the court of her nephew in Constantinople Galla observed how princesses wield power while vaunting piety. Restored to Italy on the swords of the eastern Roman army, Galla watched the coronation of her son, age six, as the emperor of the western Roman provinces. For a dozen years (425-437) she acted as regent, treading uneasily between rival senatorial factions, ambitious church prelates, and charismatic military leaders. This new biography of Galla is organized according to her changing roles as bride, widow, bereaved mother, queen and empress. It examines her relations with men in power, her achievements as a politician, her skills at establishing power bases and political alliances, and her efficiency at accomplishing her desired goals. Using all the available sources, documents, epigraphy, coinage and the visual arts, and Galla's own letters, Hagith Sivan reconstructs the turning points and highlights of Galla's odd progression from a bloodthirsty princess at Rome to a bride of a barbarian in Gaul, from a manipulative sister and wife of emperors at the imperial court at Ravenna to a beggar at the court of her relatives in Constantinople, and from a devious regent of the western Roman empire to a collaborator of popes in Rome. |
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LibraryThing Review
Reseña de usuario - MarysGirl - LibraryThingSlightly disappointed in this book. I was expecting a detailed biography, but it was more about Galla Placidia's times than her life. The information was interesting and useful for my purposes, but I was hoping for more. Leer reseña completa
Índice
Introduction | 1 |
1 A Wedding in Gaul 414 | 9 |
2 Funerals in Barcelona 414416 | 37 |
3 The Making of an Empress 417425 | 60 |
4 Restoration and Rehabilitation 425431 | 94 |
5 A Bride a Book and a Pope 437438 | 119 |
6 Between Rome and Ravenna 438450 | 142 |
7 Conclusion | 170 |
Appendixes | 177 |
201 | |
219 | |
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Términos y frases comunes
Aetius Aetius’s Africa Agnellus Alaric Alaric’s Ambrose Arcadius Arian army Athaulf Attalus Augusta barbarians Barcelona basilica bishop Blockley Boniface bride brother capital ceremony church city’s Claudian Constantinople Constantius Constantius III consul consulship court daughter death eastern ecclesiastical emperor Ephesos fifth century Flavianus funerary Galla Placidia Gallic Gaul Gothic camp Goths Gratian Helena Holum Holy honor Honorius Honorius’s husband Ibid imperial inscription Italy Jerome John John’s Justina Late Antiquity Late Roman letters Licinia Eudoxia marriage married Matthews mausoleum Maximus Melania Milan mother Narbonne nuptial Olympiodorus Oost Orosius orthodoxy Oxford pagan panegyrist papal passim Paulinus of Nola Peter piety PLRE pope prefecture princess provinces Pulcheria Ravenna Rome Rome’s senate senatorial Serena sister Sivan Spain Stilicho Theodosian Empresses Theodosius Theodosius II Theodosius’s throne tion trans Valentinian Valentinian III Vandals victory virginity wedding Western Aristocracies western Roman Empire wife women Zosimus