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14-07-2015, 14:52

Rowland Smith

More than any men known to us, the Romans love their city and strive to protect all their ancestral treasures so that nothing of Rome’s ancient glory will be obliterated.... [Even in the wake of the recent siege and occupation by the Goths] they preserved the city’s buildings and such adornments as could withstand a long lapse of time, and all such memorials of their race, among them the ship of Aeneas, the founder of the city, a quite incredible sight: for they built a ship-house in the middle of the city on the bank of the Tiber and deposited it there, and have preserved it from that time. I have seen it myself and can describe it. . . . None of its timbers has rotted or gives the least sign of being unsound; intact throughout, as if newly constructed by the hand of its builder - whoever he was - it has retained its strength in a marvellous way up to my own time. Such are the facts about Aeneas’ ship. (Procop. Goth. 8.22.3-17 [abbreviated])

Writing this passage in the mid-sixth century ce, Procopius is a striking witness to the depth of the Romans’ concern for their national past - and also to the wishfulness, or credulity, of an antique writer’s report of it: ancient chronographers placed Aeneas’s voyage to Italy around 1200 bce, which would make the pristine nautical relic Procopius saw - had it been genuine - over eighteen hundred years old. An ‘‘incredible sight,’’ indeed - but perhaps for Procopius and his Byzantine readers that was just the point: to acknowledge the continuity of Roma Aeterna as a uniquely powerful historical ideal, a marvel that overrode one’s normal experience of time (Cameron 1985: 191-2; cf. Matthews 1989: 280, 470). For us, anyway, ‘‘Aeneas’ ship,’’ so implausibly well-preserved and so willingly pronounced authentic, offers a neat emblem for the subject of this chapter. Our interest lies less with raw events of Roman history than with ancient representations of it, and ‘‘the construction of the past’’ - a title that begs to be deconstructed - signals that our discussion will emphasize the role of human artifice and imagination in this connection. We are not discussing some fortuitous product of random accumulation akin to a coral reef. To treat the past as ‘‘constructed,’’ rather than just ‘‘retrieved,’’ or ‘‘recorded,’’ suggests narration and ‘‘emplotment,’’ and individual or collective human agents shaping material purposefully in some degree - if not with the panoptic vision of a master architect, at least in the manner of a building gang that has some notion, however hazy, of what is being produced or added to, and of the end-product’s likely utility. And that purposive impulse suggests in turn a process in which historical ‘‘fact’’ may be distorted or concealed, or simply invented, to suit the end in mind.



 

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