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Optimates and Populares, Roundheads and Cavaliers, Whigs and Tories, Cowboys and Indians: the neat antitheses polarize views and enlist sympathies. Nor are they all misleading. What of ‘Julians and Claudians’? These labels were invented to distinguish ‘factions’ or ‘parties’ within the family of Augustus; the issue between them was the succession and the struggle continued until the end of the principate of Augustus' heir Tiberius. Thus comprehensible order is brought to the confused mass of information and opinion that the sources offer us. Moreover, the labels have a respectable pedigree in modern writing. They are constantly employed by F. B. Marsh in his authoritative work and survive as valid and useful in articles more recently published; where historians have trodden so boldly literary critics have not hesitated to follow. My purpose, at the cost of destroying neat and treasured theory, is to show that these terms are inapplicable to the two groups to which they have been applied, and therefore misleading. They are an impediment to serious inquiry into. complex and changing situations.
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References
page 29 note 1 Marsh, F. B., The Reign of Tiberius (Oxford, 1931; repr. 1959)Google Scholar; Shotter, D. C., ‘Julians, Claudians and the Accession of Tiberius’, Latomus xxx (1971), 1117 ff.Google Scholar; Ferrill, A., ‘Prosopography and the Last Years of Augustus’, Historia xx (1971), 718 ff.Google ScholarScullard, H. H., From the Gracchi to Nero 2 (London, 1971), 279 n. 3Google Scholar, is much more circumspect. Wilkinson, L. P., Ovid Recalled (Cambridge, 1955), 299Google Scholar, writes: ‘… the poet became involved in the dynastic tension between the Julians and the Claudians.’
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page 30 note 1 Suet. Tib. 3. 1.Google Scholar
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