000 01377cam a2200217 4500500
005 20250112054345.0
041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aMoatti, Claudia
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aExperts, Memory, and Power in Rome at the End of the Republic
260 _c2003.
500 _a67
520 _a"The principle of mediation was not permitted in the Roman Republic: experts, objects of distrust, had a low and unnoticed position. The elite, on its part, had access to large fields of savoir-faire, learned by experience: that of civic memory (institutions, traditions, religion . . . ), and that of law, military experience, or oratory. At the end of the Roman Republic, most of this savoir-faire became sciences and escaped more and more from these elites; they belonged to specialists coming from new social strata and linked to an imperator, and soon to the Emperor. Thus, intellectual transformations, which concerned the transmission of civic memory, reveal the emergence of new political practices and the rise of personal power in Rome. "
690 _aRoman Republic
690 _aexperts
690 _aroman jurists
690 _acivic memory
690 _aantiquarians
786 0 _nRevue historique | o 626 | 2 | 2003-06-01 | p. 303-325 | 0035-3264
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-revue-historique-2003-2-page-303?lang=en
999 _c214243
_d214243