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In: Historische Zeitschrift
In: Beihefte N.F., 23
World Affairs Online
In: Monarchische Herrschaft im Altertum
In: Historische Anthropologie: Kultur, Gesellschaft, Alltag, Band 20, Heft 2, S. 186-199
ISSN: 2194-4032
In: Archiv für Kulturgeschichte, Band 83, Heft 2, S. 413-450
ISSN: 2194-3958
In: Enzyklopädie der griechisch-römischen Antike Bd. 11
In: Joan Palevsky imprint in classical literature
The infamous emperor Caligula ruled Rome from A.D. 37 to 41 as a tyrant who ultimately became a monster. An exceptionally smart and cruelly witty man, Caligula made his contemporaries worship him as a god. He drank pearls dissolved in vinegar and ate food covered in gold leaf. He forced men and women of high rank to have sex with him, turned part of his palace into a brothel, and committed incest with his sisters. He wanted to make his horse a consul. Torture and executions were the order of the day. Both modern and ancient interpretations have concluded from this alleged evidence that Caligul.
This study investigates transformations of classical antiquity oikonomia and chrematistics from the Middle Ages to the present-day.From an ancient- historical, philosophical, literary and cultural-science perspective, it reconstructs exemplary acquisitions and reinterpretations of economic knowledge. The study argues that the modern economy has benefited from transformation relationships with the oikonomia of classical antiquity, which exhibit no unambiguously economic, efficient and profit-maximising character. For this reason, in addition to actual historical aspects, our interest also includes issues relating to the poetology of economic knowledge, the metaphorology and scenaristics of the house, the theoretical, narrative and literary representation economies and the promotion of 'economy' to an ordering category per se.
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