Zenobia of Palmyra

Name/Title

Zenobia of Palmyra

Secondary Title

History, Myth and the Neo-Classical Imagination

Description

Queen Zenobia of Palmyra in Syria was one of the great women of classical antiquity, a romantic if tragic heroine both to Roman authors and to Chaucer, Gibbon and the neo-classical artists of the 19th century. But both the romantic image of her as a beautiful, intellectual but chaste Arab queen of the desert, and the political perception of her as a regal woman whose feminine qualities lifted her above her misfortunes, do less than justice to Palmyra's most controversial ruler. There was a dark side to her that translates her from myth into reality, into being a ruler who for better or worse did what real rulers do and should be judged as such. This book constructs a coherent political and military narrative for Zenobia's life, confirming the depth of the 'third century crisis' of the Roman Empire, choosing between rival versions of what happened to Zenobia, and examining the myths that have surrounded her ever since.

Category

Book
Books & Paper

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Book

Nomenclature Sub-Class

Other Documents

Nomenclature Class

Documentary Objects

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

Getty AAT

Concept

books

Dimensions

Height

23.4 cm

Width

15.6 cm

Book Details

Author

Rex Winsbury

Publisher

Bristol Classical Press

Date Published

2010

Binding

Binding Type

Paperback

Publication Language

English

ISBN

071563853X 9780715638538

Notes

198 Pages

Web Links and URLs

Zenobia Queen of Palmyra