Some 35 years ago, Richard Talbert began an intellectual journey into almost uncharted scholarly territory, studying world and hour in Roman minds. He now allows us to retrace the most important steps of these explorations in detail. This most welcome collection enables all readers to understand why Talbert's research has substantially changed the way we think about space and time in the Roman world.
Kai Brodersen, Erfurt University, Germany
Talbert has developed new areas for research in Ancient History across his career. This thematic collection of essays demonstrates the steps that he took to develop some of these new lines of inquiry, notably into the views of the ancients on space and time. The essays come from both the pre-digital and the digital age, thus providing the reader with an insight into how Talbert adapted his research to the new opportunities provided by the digital revolution that reshaped how research is undertaken. He is in many ways a pioneer in searching for both new lines of historical inquiry and in adapting his research to the advantages associated with new technologies.
Ray Laurence, Professor of Ancient History, Macquarie University
A delightful landscape of Talbert's studies displayed as a collection of important milestones in modern scholarship. This academic journey through part of Talbert's rich and brilliant career is joined by Julius Caesar, Pliny the Elder, anonymous Roman soldiers and travellers and many others. Mental and real maps intertwine with Roman spatial awareness and geographical worldview and result in a coherent array of intellectual discussions.
Daniela Dueck, author of Illiterate Geography in Classical Athens and Rome