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Bibliography and Further Reading

Ancient Sources

Aetna. Trans. J. Wright Duff & A. Duff. (1935). (Rev. ed. Loeb Classical Library). Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Appian. Appian's Roman History: The Civil Wars. Trans. H. White. (1913). (Rev. ed. Loeb Classical Library). Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Cassius Dio. Roman History. Trans. E. Cary. (1916). (Rev. ed. Loeb Classical Library). Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Herodotus. The Hirstories. Trans. A. De Sélincourt & J. Marincola. (2003). London: Penguin Books.

Homer. Iliad. Trans. R. Fagles. (1990). London: Penguin Books.

Homer. Odyssey. Trans. R. Fagles. (1996). London: Penguin Books.

Plutarch. Parallel Lives: The Life of Pompey. Trans. B. Perrin. (1923). (Rev. ed. Loeb Classical Library). Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Plutarch. Roman Questions. Trans. F. Babbitt. (1936). (Rev. ed. Loeb Classical Library). Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Suetonius. The Lives of the Caesars: The Life of Julius Caesar. Trans. J. Rolfe. (1913). (Rev. ed. Loeb Classical Library). Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

Secondary Sources

Brett, A. (1936). “The Aphlaston, Symbol of Naval Victory or Supremacy on Greek and Roman Coins” in J. Allan, H. Mattingly & E. Robinson (Eds.) Transactions of the International Numismatic Congress. (pp. 23-32). London: Bernard Quaritch.

Buttery, T. (1960). “The 'Pietas' Denarii of Sextus Pompey”, The Numismatic Chronicle and Journal of the Royal Numismatic Society, 6.20: 83-101.

Evans, J. (1987). “The Sicilian Coinage of Sextus Pompeius (Crawford 511)”, Museum Notes (American Numismatic Society), 32: 97-157.

Galinsky, G. (1969). Aeneas, Sicily, and Rome. Princeton: Princeton University Press.

Gordon, R. (2003). “From Republic to Principate: Priesthood, Religion and Ideology” in C. Ando (Ed.) Roman Religion. (pp. 62-83). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.

Gowing, A. (2002). “Pirates, witches and slaves: The imperial afterlife of Sextus Pompeius” in A. Powell & K. Welch (Eds). Sextus Pompeius. (pp. 187-212). London: Gerald Duckworth & Co.

Harlow, M. (2005). “Dress in the Historia Augusta: the role of dress in historical narrative” in L. Cleland, M. Harlow & L. Llewellyn-Jones (Eds.) The Clothed Body in the Ancient World. Oxford: Oxbow Books.

Jaques, T. (2007). Dictionary of Battles and Sieges: A Guide to 8,500 Battles from Antiquity through the Twenty-first Century. Westport: Greenwood Press.

Lockyear, K. (2012). “Dating Coins, Dating with Coins”, Oxford Journal of Archaeology, 31.2: 191-211.

Lowe, B. (2002). “Sextus Pompeius and Spain” in A. Powell & K. Welch (Eds.) Sextus Pompeius. (pp. 65-102). London: Gerald Duckworth & Co.

Morrison, J. (2016). Greek and Roman Oared Warships 399-30BC. Oxford: Oxbow Books.

Morstein-Marx, R. (2004). Mass Oratory and Political Power in the Late Roman Republic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Newman, R. (1990). “A Dialogue of Power in the Coinage of Antony and Octavian (44-30 BC)”, American Journal of Numismatics, 2: 37-63.

Reddé, M. (1979). “La représentation des phares à l’époque romaine”, Mélanges de l’École française de Rome – Antiquité, 91.2: 845-872.

Rolfe, J. (2015). Politics and Priesthoods in Late Republican Rome. (Unpublished masters thesis). University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand.

Rowan, C. (2019). From Caesar to Augustus (c, 49 BC-AD 14): Using Coins as Sources. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Zarrow, E. (2003). “Sicily and the Coinage of Octavian and Sextus Pompey: Aeneas of the Catanean Brothers?”, The Numismatic Chronicle, 163: 123-135.

Bibliography and Further Reading