Cassius Dio (c. 160âc. 230) is a familiar name to Roman historians, but still an enigmatic one. His text has shaped our understanding of his own period and earlier eras, but basic questions remain about his Greek and Roman cultural identities and his literary and intellectual influences. Contributors to this volume read Dio against different backgrounds including the politics of the Severan court, the cultural milieu of the Second Sophistic and Roman traditions of historiography and political theory. Dio emerges as not just a recounter of events, but a representative of his times in all their complexity.
Adam Kemezis, Ph.D. (2006) is Associate Professor in the Department of History, Classics and Religion at the University of Alberta. He is the author of Greek Narratives of the Roman Empire under the Severans: Cassius Dio, Philostratus and Herodian (Cambridge, 2014) and a number of articles on Dio and other authors and topics in Imperial Roman historiography and literature.
Colin Bailey, Ph.D. (2006) is Associate Professor of Classics at MacEwan University. He has published papers on Dio Chrysostom, Plutarch of Chaeronea, and Roman Republican history. His research interests focus on early imperial Greek literature and interactions between Greece and Rome.
Beatrice Poletti, Ph.D. (2018) is Adjunct Assistant Professor of Classics at Queenâs University. She has written several papers on Dionysius of Halicarnassus and Augustan historiography and religion. Her interests include historiography of Rome, Augustan literature, and Roman religion.
"The volumes under discussion are invaluable contributions to the scholarship on Dioâs intellectual landscape, narrative technique, and theory of empire. The Intellectual Climate of Cassius Dio makes an irresistible case for reading the Roman History intertextually and interculturally."- Leanne Jansen, Department of Classics, Groningen University, in: "Literary Technique in the Roman History", Mnemosyne 78 (2025)
"Through the diverse cases studied, the volume's authors propose to show the originality and the coherence of Dio's project by setting it against literary tradition. Neither do they refrain from outlining the shadowy side or the preconceptions of an author who is also a public figure mindful of his career and reputation. The authors offer thorough case studies and thereby contribute to a better understanding of some specific themes (...) The aim to cast new light on an author currently enjoying many recent publications was ambitious and is partly successful, notably in Parts 3 and 4 more clearly dedicated to Dio's literary choices and his position as a writer; the chapters by Jones, Kemezis and Asirvatham are novel on this score and deserve special mention within the context of this volume, which brings to a useful conclusion a programme whose outcomes will have increased the knowledge of Cassius Dio's Roman History significantly." - Estrelle Bertrand, in: The Classical Review 75.1
Acknowledgements List of Figures and Tables Notes on Contributors Historiography of Rome and Its Empire Series
âCarsten H. Lange and Jesper M. Madsen
Introduction: Conversations with the Author
âAdam Kemezis, Colin Bailey and Beatrice Poletti
part 1: Political Theory and Commentary
1 Dio and Pompey: Explaining the Failure of the Republic
âDavid S. Potter
2 âSafety Firstâ: Cassius Dio on the Augustan Senate
âJonathan Scott Perry
3 Cassius Dio and the Ideal Constitution
âJasper Majbom Madsen
4 Monarchy as âTrue Democracyâ in Cassius Dio and the Second Sophistic Authors: Irony, Utopia, or Ideal?
âKonstantin V. Markov
5 Antoninum habemus, omnia habemus: The nomen Antoninorum Issue between the Historia Augusta and Cassius Dio
âAntonio Pistellato
part 2: Rome and the Imperial Court
6 Contested Constructions: Cassius Dio and the Framing of Female Participation as Builders
âKarin S. Tate
7 Dio and the Dowager Empresses, Part 2: Julia Domna, the Senate, and Succession
âJulie Langford
8 Cassius Dio and the Imperial Admission
âMads Ortving Lindholmer
9 Cassius Dio and the Imitatio Alexandri
âFrances Pownall
10 Cassius Dio, Julia Maesa and the Omens Foretelling the Rise of Elagabalus and Severus Alexander
âRiccardo Bertolazzi
11 Imperial Fortunes: Portents, Prodigies and Dioâs Astrology of the State
âSelina Stewart
part 3: Literary Heritage
12 The Novel World of Cassius Dio
âBrandon Jones
13 Telling Tales of Macrinus: Strategies of Fiction in Dioâs Contemporary History
âJoel Allen
14 Dio and the Failed Politician Cicero
âRobert Porod
15 Cameo Roles: Dioâs Portrayal of Earlier Senatorial Historians
âAdam M. Kemezis
part 4: Hellenic Culture
16 Bilingualism and Authority in Cassius Dio
âSulochana Asirvatham
17 Cassius Dioâs Asia Minor: Biography and Historiography
âChristina T. Kuhn
18 Dio, Severus, and the Ludi Saeculares of 204 ce
âJeremy Rossiter and Bethany Brothers
Index
Post-graduate scholars and undergraduate scholars of ancient Roman historiography and society, Greek and Roman literature and culture, and ancient political theory, Academic librarians.