Civil War Monuments: The Prelude to A Future Reckoning

Carsten Hjort Lange (Aalborg)

Abstract: The Romans were not afraid of talking about civil war and regularly did so, even if they did not always spell it out in explicit terms. Civil war had a great impact upon society and involved numerous levels of justification—chiefly, in the case of Rome – apart from in writing –, through the erection of victory monuments as conspicuous civil war markers in the city of Rome itself. Erected by the victor, these often displayed a positive and sanitized version of civil war which highlighted not the horrors of war but rather its successful termination, so creating a positive exemplum out of the conflict. Nevertheless, regardless of these efforts to sanitize the language and thus shaping the memory of a civil war, its story could not be retold without people remembering its terrors. Such monuments served to keep the memory of civil war alive and testify to the long-term impact of conflict. In addition, the long list of civil war monuments that we know of testifies to an ongoing debate about warfare at Rome. Unlike our modern counterparts—for example scholars of the American Civil War, who have no need to repeatedly reconstruct the context of their civil war monuments—we as ancient historians need to establish the civil war context of these ancient memorials first and foremost.

The seminar is organised by the research group The Ancient Mediterranean: Archaeology, History, and Society (IAKH) in collaboration with the Classics seminar (IFIKK)

Published Mar. 10, 2023 1:36 PM - Last modified Mar. 10, 2023 2:01 PM