1.
Bowman, A.K., Lintott, A., Champlin, E.J.: Cambridge Ancient History: The Augustan Empire, 43 BC-AD 69. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
2.
Richardson, J.S.: Augustan Rome 44 BC to AD 14: the restoration of the Republic and the establishment of the Empire. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (2012).
3.
Syme, R.: The Roman Revolution. Oxford University Press (1963).
4.
Eck, W.: The age of Augustus. Blackwell Pub, Malden, Mass (2007).
5.
Campbell, J.B.: The Romans and their world: 753 BC to AD 476. Yale University Press, New Haven (2011).
6.
Goodman, M.: The Roman world, 44 BC-AD 180. Routledge, London (2012).
7.
Zanker, P.: The power of images in the age of Augustus. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Mich (1988).
8.
Levick, B.: Tiberius the politician. Routledge, London (1999).
9.
Seager, R.: Tiberius. Eyre Methuen, London (1972).
10.
Galinsky, K.: The Cambridge companion to the Age of Augustus. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2005).
11.
Potter, D.S., Potter, D.S.: A Companion to the Roman Empire. Wiley, Hoboken (2008).
12.
Wallace-Hadrill, A.: Augustan Rome. Bristol Classical Press, Bristol (1993).
13.
Cooley, A., Augustus: Res gestae divi Augusti: text, translation, and commentary. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2009).
14.
Raaflaub, K.A., Toher, M., Bowersock, G.W.: Between republic and empire: interpretations of Augustus and his principate. University of California Press, Berkeley (1990).
15.
Herbert W. Benario: Augustus, Rome, and the Romans. In: Veritatis amicitiaeque causa: essays in honor of Anna Lydia Motto and John R. Clark. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Wauconda, Ill (1999).
16.
Tacitus, C., Yardley, J.C., Barrett, A.A.: The Annals: The Reigns of Tiberius, Claudius, and Nero. Oxford University Press, [Oxford] (2016).
17.
Shotter, D.C.A.: Tiberius Caesar. Routledge, London (2004).
18.
Cooley, M.G.L., Wilson, B.W.J.G.: The age of Augustus. London Association of Classical Teachers, [London] (2003).
19.
Cooley, M.G.L., Cooley, A., London Association of Classical Teachers: Tiberius to Nero. London Association of Classical Teachers, [Cambridge] (2011).
20.
Dillon, M., Garland, L.: Ancient Rome: social and historical documents from the early Republic to the death of Augustus. Routledge, London, [England] (2015).
21.
Levick, B.: The government of the Roman Empire: a sourcebook. Routledge, London (2000).
22.
Sherk, R.K.: The Roman Empire: Augustus to Hadrian. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1988).
23.
Braund, D.: Augustus to Nero: a sourcebook on Roman history 31BC - AD68. Croom Helm, London (1985).
24.
Lewis, N., Reinhold, M.: Roman civilization: selected readings, Vol. 2: The Empire. Columbia University Press, New York (1955).
25.
Swain, H., Davies, M.E.: Aspects of Roman history, 82 BC-AD 14: a source-based approach. Routledge, London (2010).
26.
P. A. Brunt: The Role of the Senate in the Augustan Regime. The Classical Quarterly. 34, 423–444 (1984).
27.
Richard J. A. Talbert: Augustus and the Senate. Greece & Rome. 31, 55–63 (1984).
28.
J. S. Richardson: The Senate, the Courts, and the SC de Cn. Pisone patre. The Classical Quarterly. 47, 510–518 (1997).
29.
Keith Hopkins: Élite Mobility in the Roman Empire. Past & Present. 12–26 (1965).
30.
Garnsey, P., Saller, R.P.: The Roman Empire: economy, society and culture. Duckworth, London (1987).
31.
J. S. Richardson: The Senate, the Courts, and the SC de Cn. Pisone patre. The Classical Quarterly. 47, 510–518 (1997).
32.
Gibson, A., Gibson, A.G.G.: The Julio-Claudian Succession: Reality and Perception of the ‘“Augustan Model”’. BRILL, Leiden (2012).
33.
Millar, F.: The emperor in the Roman world (31 BC-AD 337). Duckworth, London (1977).
34.
Barrett, A.: Livia: First Lady of Imperial Rome. Harvard University Press (2002).
35.
Fantham, E.: Julia Augusti: the emperor’s daughter. Routledge, London (2006).
36.
Augustus by Karl Galinsky.
37.
Linda W.R. Gillison: Tiberius’ Roman retirement: antecedents and implications. In: Veritatis amicitiaeque causa: essays in honor of Anna Lydia Motto and John R. Clark. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Wauconda, Ill (1999).
38.
Ronald Syme: The Crisis of 2 B.C. In: Roman papers: 3. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1984).
39.
Rose, C.B.: Dynastic commemoration and imperial portraiture in the Julio-Claudian period. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1997).
40.
Eric Gruen: Augustus and the making of the Principate. In: The Cambridge companion to the Age of Augustus. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2005).
41.
Barbara Levick: The Politics of the Early Principate. In: Roman political life: 90 B.C.-A.D.69. University of Exeter, Department of History and Archaeology, Exeter (1985).
42.
Lowrie, M.: Auctoritas and Representation: Augustus’ Res gestae. In: Writing, Performance, and Authority in Augustan Rome. pp. 279–308. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2009). https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199545674.003.0012.
43.
Lacey, W.K.: Augustus and the principate: the evolution of the system. Francis Cairns, Leeds (1996).
44.
Geoffrey Sumi: CEREMONY AND THE EMERGENCE OF COURT SOCIETY IN THE AUGUSTAN PRINCIPATE. The American Journal of Philology. 132, 81–102 (2011).
45.
J. W. RICH and J. H. C. WILLIAMS: Leges et Ivra P. R. Restitvit: A New Aureus of Octavian and the Settlement of 28-27 BC. The Numismatic Chronicle (1966-). 159, 169–213 (1999).
46.
Swan, P.M.: The Augustan Succession: An Historical Commentary on Cassius Dio’s Roman History, Books 55-56 (9 B.C.-A.D. 14). Oxford University Press (2004).
47.
Rogers, R.S.: Criminal trials and criminal legislation under Tiberius. American Philogical Assoc, Middletown, Conn (1935).
48.
Garzetti, A.: From Tiberius to the Antonines: a history of the Roman Empire AD14-192. Methuen, London (1974).
49.
Osgood, J.: Caesar’s legacy: civil war and the emergence of the Roman Empire. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006).
50.
Personal Patronage under the Early Empire by Richard P. Saller.
51.
Brunt, P.A.: Roman imperial themes. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1990).
52.
H. W. Bird: L. Aelius Seianus and his Political Significance. Latomus. 61–98 (1969).
53.
Sumi, G.S.: Ceremony and power: performing politics in Rome between Republic and Empire. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Mich (2005).
54.
E. Flaig: The Transition from Republic to Principate: Loss of Legitimacy, Revolution, and Acceptance. In: The Roman Empire in context: historical and comparative perspectives. Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken, N.J. (2011).
55.
J. Richardson: After Augustus. In: The language of empire: Rome and the idea of empire from the third century BC to the second century AD. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008).
56.
Potter, D.S., Potter, D.S.: A Companion to the Roman Empire. Wiley, Hoboken (2008).
57.
Griffin, M.: Tacitus, Tiberius and the principate. In: Leaders and masses in the Roman world: studies in honor of Zvi Yavetz. E.J. Brill, Leiden (1995).
58.
John Scheid (trans. J. Edmondson): To Honour the Princeps and Venerate the Gods: Public Cult, Neighbourhood Cults, and Imperial Cult in Augustan Rome. In: Augustus. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (2009).
59.
John Scheid: Augustus and Roman religion: continuity, conservatism, and innovation. In: The Cambridge companion to the Age of Augustus. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2005).
60.
Olivier Hekster and John Rich: Octavian and the Thunderbolt: The Temple of Apollo Palatinus and Roman Traditions of Temple Building. The Classical Quarterly. 56, 149–168 (2006).
61.
Beard, M.: The Roman Triumph. The Belknapp Press of Harvard University Press (2007).
62.
Duncan Fishwick: On the Temple of Divus ‘Augustus’. Phoenix. 46, 232–255 (1992).
63.
Karl Galinsky: Venus, Polysemy, and the Ara Pacis Augustae. American Journal of Archaeology. 96, 457–475 (1992).
64.
Robert A. Gurval: CAESAR’S COMET: THE POLITICS AND POETICS OF AN AUGUSTAN MYTH. Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome. 42, 39–71 (1997).
65.
Koortbojian, M.: The divinization of Caesar and Augustus: precedents, consequences, implications. Cambridge University Press, New York, NY (2013).
66.
A.-M. Lewis: AUGUSTUS AND HIS HOROSCOPE RECONSIDERED. Phoenix. 62, 308–337 (2008).
67.
Liebeschuetz, J.H.W.G.: Continuity and change in Roman religion. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1979).
68.
Gradel, I.: Emperor worship and Roman religion. Clarendon Press, Oxford (2002).
69.
Price, S.R.F.: Rituals and power: the Roman imperial cult in Asia Minor. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1984).
70.
Beard, M., North, J.S., Price, S.R.F.: The Re-placing of Roman Religion. In: Religions of Rome: Vol. 1: A history. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1998).
71.
Brodd, J., Reed, J.L.: Rome and religion: a cross-disciplinary dialogue on the imperial cult. Society of Biblical Literature, Atlanta, GA (2011).
72.
Stefan Weinstock: Saeculum Iulium. In: Divus Julius. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1971).
73.
Warrior, V.M.: Roman religion. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press (2006).
74.
Eric M. Orlin: Octavian and Egyptian Cults: Redrawing the Boundaries of Romanness. The American Journal of Philology. 129, 231–253 (2008).
75.
Patrick Sinclair: ‘These Are My Temples in Your Hearts’ (Tac. Ann. 4. 38. 2). Classical Philology. 86, 333–335 (1991).
76.
WARDLE, D.: SUETONIUS ON AUGUSTUS AS GOD AND MAN. The Classical Quarterly. 62, 307–326 (2012). https://doi.org/10.1017/S0009838811000681.
77.
Paul Zanker: Happiness Born of Victory. In: The power of images in the age of Augustus. University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Mich (1988).
78.
Dyson, S.L.: Rome: a living portrait of an ancient city. Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore (2010).
79.
Favro, D.: The urban image of Augustan Rome. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
80.
Galinsky, K.: Augustan culture: an interpretive introduction. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1998).
81.
Barbara A. Kellum: The Construction of Landscape in Augustan Rome: The Garden Room at the Villa ad Gallinas. The Art Bulletin. 76, 211–224 (1994).
82.
James Morwood: Aeneas, Augustus, and the Theme of the City. Greece & Rome. 38, 212–223 (1991).
83.
Favro, D.: The urban image of Augustan Rome. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996).
84.
T.J. Luce: Livy, Augustus, and the Forum Augustum. In: Between republic and empire: interpretations of Augustus and his principate. University of California Press, Berkeley (1990).
85.
Evans, H.B.: Agrippa’s Water Plan. American Journal of Archaeology. 86, (1982). https://doi.org/10.2307/504429.
86.
Lintott, A.W.: The Romans in the age of Augustus. Wiley-Blackwell, Chichester, West Sussex (2010).
87.
Yavetz, Z.: Plebs and princeps. Clarendon Press, Oxford (1969).
88.
Severy, B.: Augustus and the family at the birth of the Roman Empire. Routledge, New York; London (2003).
89.
Adam M. Kemezis: Augustus the Ironic Paradigm: Cassius Dio’s Portrayal of the Lex Julia and Lex Papia Poppaea. Phoenix. 61, 270–285 (2007).
90.
Milnor, K.: Gender, Domesticity, and the Age of Augustus: Inventing Private Life. Oxford University Press.
91.
Marleen Flory: Abducta Neroni uxor: The Historiographical Tradition on the Marriage of Octavian and Livia. Transactions of the American Philological Association (1974-). 118, 343–359 (1988).
92.
Sebesta, J.L.: Women’s Costume and Feminine Civic Morality in Augustan Rome. Gender & History. 9, 529–541 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1111/1468-0424.00074.
93.
Ronald Syme: Neglected Children on the Ara Pacis. American Journal of Archaeology. 88, 583–589 (1984).
94.
K. Raaflaub: The Political Significance of Augustus’ Military Reforms. In: Augustus. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (2009).
95.
Tim Cornell: The End of Roman Imperial Expansion. In: War and society in the Roman world. Routledge, London (1993).
96.
John Rich: Augustus, War and Peace. In: Augustus. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (2009).
97.
J. W. Rich: Augustus’s Parthian Honours, the Temple of Mars Ultor and the Arch in the Forum Romanum. Papers of the British School at Rome. 66, 71–128 (1998).
98.
Brian Campbell: War and diplomacy: Rome and Parthia, 31 BC - AD 235. In: War and society in the Roman world. Routledge, London (1993).
99.
Charles Brian Rose: The Parthians in Augustan Rome. American Journal of Archaeology. 109, 21–75 (2005).
100.
Gurval, R.A.: Actium and Augustus: The politics and emotions of civil war. The University of Michigan Press, Ann Arbor, Mich (1998).
101.
Cornwell, H.: Pax and the politics of peace: Republic to Principate. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2017).
102.
E.S. Gruen: The Imperial policy of Augustus. In: Between republic and empire: interpretations of Augustus and his principate. University of California Press, Berkeley (1990).
103.
Flower, H.I.: The Tradition of the Spolia Opima: M. Claudius Marcellus and Augustus. Classical Antiquity. 19, 34–64 (2000). https://doi.org/10.2307/25011111.
104.
Boddington, A.: Sejanus. Whose Conspiracy? The American Journal of Philology. 84, (1963). https://doi.org/10.2307/293155.
105.
K.A. Raaflaub, L.J. Samons II: Opposition to Augustus. In: Between republic and empire: interpretations of Augustus and his principate. University of California Press, Berkeley (1990).
106.
Darryl A. Phillips: The Conspiracy of Egnatius Rufus and the Election of Suffect Consuls under Augustus. Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 103–112 (1997).
107.
McDermott, W.C.: Varro Murena. Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. 72, (1941). https://doi.org/10.2307/283056.
108.
Harries, J.: Controlling Elites II: Maiestas. In: Law and crime in the Roman world. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2007).
109.
William D. Barry: Exposure, Mutilation, and Riot: Violence at the ‘Scalae Gemoniae’ in Early Imperial Rome. Greece & Rome. 55, 222–246 (2008).
110.
Pettinger, A.: Republic in Danger: Drusus Libo and the Succession of Tiberius. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012).
111.
Flower, H.I.: Rethinking ‘Damnatio Memoriae’: The Case of Cn. Calpurnius Piso Pater in AD 20. Classical Antiquity. 17, 155–187 (1998). https://doi.org/10.2307/25011081.
112.
William D. Barry: Exposure, Mutilation, and Riot: Violence at the ‘Scalae Gemoniae’ in Early Imperial Rome. Greece & Rome. 55, 222–246 (2008).
113.
Valerius Maximus on the Domus Augusta, Augustus, and Tiberius - 1558906.pdf.
114.
Powell, A.: Roman poetry and propaganda in the age of Augustus. Bristol Classical Press, Bristol (1992).
115.
Cowan, E.: Velleius Paterculus: making history. Classical Press of Wales, Swansea (2011).
116.
Rich, J.W., Cassius Dio Cocceianus: The Augustan settlement: (Roman history 53.1-55.9). Aris & Phillips, Warminster (1990).
117.
S.G. Nugent: Tristia 2: Ovid and Augustus. In: Between republic and empire: interpretations of Augustus and his principate. University of California Press, Berkeley (1990).
118.
Syme, R.: Tacitus. Clarendon Press(1958), Oxford.
119.
Luce, T.J., Woodman, A.J. eds: Tacitus and the Tacitean tradition. Princeton University Press, [Princeton, NJ, United States] (2014).
120.
A. J. Woodman: Tacitus’ Obituary of Tiberius. The Classical Quarterly. 39, 197–205 (1989).
121.
Claassen, J.-M.: Ovid revisited: the poet in exile. Bloomsbury Publishing, London (2013).
122.
A companion to Latin literature. Blackwell Pub., Malden, MA (2007).