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Hermathena A TRINITY COLLEGE DUBLIN REVIEW The Roman Civil Wars: A House Divided Edited by Richard W estall N os 196–197 Summer–Winter 2014 [2018] UN IV ERSIT Y OF DUBLIN C ONTENTS N OTE OF THANKS 5 I NTRODUCTION Richard Westall 7 A RTICLES Part I: The anthropology of Roman Civil War The construction of one’s enemies in civil war (49-30 BCE) Hannah Cornwell 41 The logic of violence in Roman civil war Carsten H. Lange 69 Cassius Dio 41.43: religion as a liability in Pompey’s civil war Lindsay G. Driediger-Murphy 99 Pietatis Imago Roger Pitcher 121 Part II: The prosopography and legal history of Roman Civil War The Lex Pedia of 43 BCE and its aftermath Kathryn Welch 137 Quintus Fufius Calenus: a forgotten career Anna B. Miączewska 163 Family matters: Velleius Paterculus and the Roman civil wars Marius Gerhardt 205 Part III: Philology and literary representation of Roman Civil War Caesar prophesies the future: Sallust Catiline 51.35-6. An exercise in historiography Martin Stone† 231 Varro on civil war: Book 4 of De vita populi Romani Antonino Pittà 251 The flight from Rome in January 49 BCE: rhetorical patterns in the narratives of Lucan and Cassius Dio Stefano Poletti 291 Pompeius at Pelusium: the death of the Roman lord of Asia Richard Westall 309 B IBLIOGRAPHY 341