
New Books in Ancient History Caillan Davenport, "Behind Caesar's Back: Rumor, Gossip, and the Making of the Roman Emperors" (Yale UP, 2026)
Feb 10, 2026
Caillan Davenport, Roman historian at the Australian National University and author of Behind Caesar's Back, explores how rumor and gossip shaped views of emperors. He traces street talk, graffiti, and songs across centuries. Short, vivid scenes cover political effects, scandals about sex and appearance, false claimants, and how rulers tried to control what people said.
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Talking As Politics
- Talking about the emperor functioned as political engagement because decisions moved behind palace doors.
- Street talk passed judgment on laws, taxes, and religious decrees outside official channels.
Reconstruct Orality From Written Fragments
- Use diverse sources (letters, papyri, graffiti, sermons, chants) to reconstruct oral discourse from antiquity.
- Weave these materials to excavate rumours and gossip despite lacking verbatim transcripts.
How News And Rumour Traveled
- Official news moved via the cursus publicus and sea routes, read aloud or displayed publicly for low-literacy audiences.
- Rumours followed similar travel patterns but were slowed or blocked by seasonal and regional connectivity gaps.




