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USA 250: America’s Roman Revolution

6/11/202652 min

In case you haven’t noticed… the USA is celebrating a special anniversary. Mary and Charlotte talk to one of America’s leading scholars of ancient Rome and its modern reception, Joy Connolly, about why so much of the struggle for independence deployed the words, images and sometimes actual clothing of the Ancient Romans.  They discuss George Washington’s production of the tragedy of Cato in the revolutionary army and Joseph Warren’s donning of a toga to incite the rebels. They ask why the Declaration of Independence and Constitution drew so heavily on Roman writers like Cicero and Virgil, why Cincinnati was named after the authoritarian Cincinnatus, and to what extent the Republicans and Democrats resemble the classical ideologies they named themselves after. Most of all, the big question: did the Founders know that Virgil’s words e pluribus unum (out of many, one), which became a rallying cry for the merging of the colonies into one, actually came from a recipe for cheese spread?  Mary and Charlotte recommend some further reading: Joy has written about the use of classics in the revolutionary period and later in: “Classical Education and the Early American Democratic Style” in S. Stephens and P. Vasunia (eds), Classics and National Cultures (Oxford UP, 2010) and “Past Sovereignty: Roman Freedom for Modern Revolutionaries” in Basil Duffalo (ed), Roman Error (Oxford UP, 2017). You can read more about her work at ACLS. There are many useful introductions to different aspects of the Romanness of the American Revolution. We have enjoyed: C. J. Richard, The Founders and the Classics (Harvard UP, pb, 1995) M. Malamud, Ancient Rome and Modern America (Wiley Blackwell, pb, 2008) M. N. S. Sellars, “The Roman Republic and the French and American Revolutions", in H. Flower (ed), The Cambridge Companion to the Roman Republic (Cambridge UP, pb, 2004) More focussed on cultural influence than any directly political impact is W. L. Vance, America’s Rome (Yale UP, 1990) An article on Joseph Warren’s toga. A 1903 letter to the New York Times discussing the tracing of “e pluribus unum” to “Moretum”, the poem once attributed to Virgil that offers a recipe for herby, garlicky cheese spread. @instaclassicpod for Insta, TikTok and YouTube @insta_classics for X email: instantclassicspod@gmail.com Instant Classics handmade by Vespucci Producer: Jonty Claypole  Video Editor: Jak Ford Theme music: Casey Gibson   Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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First 90 seconds
  1. Speaker 10:00

    This episode is brought to you by Prime. What if you had one more chance with the one that got away?

  2. Speaker 20:06

    Sam.

  3. Speaker 30:06

    You came home.

  4. Speaker 10:07

    Based on the best-selling novel from Carley Fortune. Every Year After follows childhood friends Sam and Percy as they reunite in the dreamy, nostalgic lakeside town of Fairy's Bay.

  5. Speaker 20:18

    Love can be hard to find, so if you're lucky enough to find that person, never let go.

  6. Speaker 10:24

    A second chance at first love. Every Year After, now streaming only on Prime.

  7. Mary Beard· Host0:30

    The American Revolution was fought in Roman costume.

  8. Charlotte Higgins· Host0:33

    Sometimes literally. The year before the Declaration of Independence in 1776, one revolutionary delivers his call to arms and his attack on the rule of the Brits dressed in a toga.

  9. Mary Beard· Host0:47

    In the winter of 1778, when his troops were cold, hungry, and actually close to mutiny, George Washington spurred them on in their struggle against the forces of King George III with a performance of a play about Cato the Younger, the Roman freedom fighter who stood up to Julius Caesar.

  10. Charlotte Higgins· Host1:10

    I'm sure that bucked them up. [laughs] It's no coincidence that the US Senate is called The Senate, or that it meets on the Capitol Hill like the one in Rome.

  11. Mary Beard· Host1:21

    And no coincidence either that the American city of Cincinnati was named after Lucius Quinctius

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