Greg Nagy
Last updated at
July 8, 2020, 3:03 p.m.
{"blocks":[{"key":"1n9fu","text":"In his narrative, Pausanias will focus here on the ancient Celtic people known as the Gauls, called Galatai in Greek, as they existed in the third century BCE. By maintaining this focus, Pausanias will be defamiliarizing the Gauls as they existed in his own time, that is, in the second century CE. I say this because it stands to reason that educated Greeks in the time of Pausanias would have been well enough informed about the existence of romanized Gauls living in the western and non-Greek part of Roman Empire—in what is now northern Italy, France, and Spain. By contrast, educated Romans in the time of Pausanias—and even Greeks—would have been relatively unfamiliar with the reality of earlier Gauls who figured in the pre-imperial history of the eastern and Greek part of the same Roman Empire.","type":"unstyled","depth":0,"inlineStyleRanges":[{"offset":100,"length":7,"style":"ITALIC"}],"entityRanges":[],"data":{}}],"entityMap":{}}