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Cary Michael Barber

California State University, San Bernardino
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 More details
  • California State University, San Bernardino
    History
    Associate Professor
CV
Homepage
San Bernardino, California, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy
19th Century German Philosophy
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy: Topics
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy, Miscellaneous
Areas of Interest
Ancient Greek and Roman Political Philosophy
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy: Rhetoric
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy: Topics
Ancient Greek and Roman Philosophy, Miscellaneous
Stoics: Epistemology
1 more
  • All publications (2)
  •  15
    WHEN IS A GIFT NOT A GIFT? CONSTRUCTING CORRUPTION IN ANTIQUITY - Filippo Carlà-Uhink / Eike Faber (edd.), Corruption in the Graeco-Roman World. Re-Reading the Sources. (Twisted Transfers 1.) Pp. xviii + 344. Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter, 2025. Cased, £91, €99.95, US$109.99. ISBN: 978-3-11-133860-6 (review)
    The Classical Review 1-4. forthcoming.
    Classics
  •  72
    Quibus Patet Curia: Livy 23.23.6 and the Mid- Republican Aristocracy of Office
    História 69 (3): 332. 2020.
    Mid-Republican censors were bound by few formal restrictions in their lectiones of the Senate. So holds the scholarly communis opinio, at any rate, based primarily on Carolus Sigonius' emendation of Livy 23.23.6. This article shows Sigonius' emendation to be fatally flawed, however, and popular election to be a legal requirement for senatorial enrollment – and not just a social desideratum. This prerequisite is shown to originate in the fourth-century lex Ovinia, with ramifications for models of…Read more
    Mid-Republican censors were bound by few formal restrictions in their lectiones of the Senate. So holds the scholarly communis opinio, at any rate, based primarily on Carolus Sigonius' emendation of Livy 23.23.6. This article shows Sigonius' emendation to be fatally flawed, however, and popular election to be a legal requirement for senatorial enrollment – and not just a social desideratum. This prerequisite is shown to originate in the fourth-century lex Ovinia, with ramifications for models of aristocratic rule at Rome, mid-Republican political developments, and the curia itself.
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