Virtus Romana: Politics And Morality In The Rom... (SAFE · 2025)

Catalina Balmaceda , Associate Professor at Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile. Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press (2017).

Adapts the concept for life under autocracy. Under tyrannical rule, virtus becomes less about public glory and more about "private" qualities like constancy, moderation, and endurance . Key Takeaways Virtus Romana: Politics and Morality in the Rom...

In her book , Catalina Balmaceda explores how the core Roman concept of virtus (manliness or virtue) evolved as Rome shifted from a Republic to an Empire. By analyzing the works of four major historians—Sallust, Livy, Velleius Paterculus, and Tacitus—she demonstrates that these writers did not just record history, but actively shaped Roman identity and morality through their changing definitions of what it meant to be a "good" Roman. Core Themes & Evolution of Virtus Under tyrannical rule, virtus becomes less about public

Views virtus through the lens of decline. He argues that the loss of external threats ( metus hostilis ) led the Roman nobility to abandon true service to the state, replacing virtus with vices like avarice and ambition. Core Themes & Evolution of Virtus Views virtus

Scholars of Roman history, historiography, and intellectual history, as well as advanced undergraduates.

Definitions of political and moral terms are not fixed; they are reinterpreted by historians to fit or challenge contemporary political realities.