The Image of Ancient Rome in the Cinema

Authors

  • Carl J. Mora University of New Mexico (Albuquerque)

Abstract

The ancestral memory of the Roman Empire has been the most persistent theme defining European civilization. From this vanished political entity of antiquity the modern divisions of Western, Central, and Eastern Europe have drawn much of their governmental, military, religious, and cultural heritage and practice. It is not surprising then that Europe repeatedly has sought to reestablish a semblage of «the glory that was Rome»-beginning with Charlmagne's Carolingian Empire in the 6th century A.D., continuing with the Holy Roman Empire in the 8th century A.D. (which lasted until 1806), and followed by the various renaissances beginning in the 14th century which sought to recuperate the scattered classical literary traditions. The culmination of these neo-Roman restorative trends came with the 20th century Italian and German Fascists' overwrought attempts to recreate what they perceived was the martial spectacle and power of ancient Rome.

Author Biography

Carl J. Mora, University of New Mexico (Albuquerque)

Carl J. MORA is Ph. D. and Professor of Film History at the University of New Mexico (Albuquerque). Webside Editor of this journal, has published several articles on cinema and history relationship, and the book Mexican Cinema. Reflections of a Society, 1896- 1988 (Berkeley University Press). He has been also the Director of two International Seminars on Spanish Film at the University of Barcelona (1993,1997).

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