Abstract

Valerius Maximus’Facta et dicta memorabiliaprovide an opportunity of seeing how an undistinguished talent responded to the demise of the republic and the establishment of an imperial system. Fergus Millar has argued that we should view Valerius as a contemporary of Ovid, that is as an author influenced by the last years of Augustus and writing in the early years of Tiberius’ reign, but the internal evidence ofFacta et dicta memorabiliabetter fits publication in the early 30sa.d.in the aftermath of Sejanus’ unsuccessful conspiracy. Although this does distance Valerius further from the key years of transition, he is not remote—and because of the relative paucity of prose authors of the period his presentation of thedomus Augustaand of Augustus and Tiberius repays attention.

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