Historia 33 (1984): 309–30.
——(1987) ‘The Meaning of Augusta in the Julio-Claudian Period’, American Journal of Ancient History 13.2: 113–38.
——(1988) ‘ Abducta Neroni Uxor : The Historiographical Tradition on the Marriage of Octavian and Livia’, Transactions of the America Philological Association 118: 343–59.
——(1993) ‘Livia and the History of Public Honorific Statues for Women in Rome’, Transactions of the American Philological Association 123: 287–308.
——(1995) ‘The Deification of Roman Women’, Ancient History Bulletin 9.3: 127–34.
——(1998) ‘The Integration of Women into the Roman Triumph’, Historia 47: 489–94.
Flower, H. I. (2006) The Art of Forgetting: Disgrace and Oblivion in Roman Political Culture . Chapel Hil, NC.
Frakes, R. M. (2006) ‘The Dynasty of Constantine down to 363’, in Lenski (ed.).
Fraschetti, A. (2001) Roman Women , trans. L. Lappin. Chicago and London.
Freisenbruch, A. (2004) ‘The Correspondence of Marcus Cornelius Fronto’. Dissertation. (unpublished). Cambridge.
Frost, H. (1983) ‘The Nymphaeum at Baiae’, International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 12: 81–3.
Gabriel, M. M. (1955) Livia’s Garden Room at Prima Porta . New York.
Gardner, J. F. (1986) Women in Roman Law and Society . London.
Garlick, B., Dixon, S. and Allen, P. (eds.) (1992) Stereotypes of Women in Power: Historical Perspectives and Revisionist Views . London and New York.
Ginsburg, J. (2006) Representing Agrippina: Constructions of Female Power in the Early Roman Empire . New York and Oxford.
Goodman, M. (1997) The Roman World 44 BC–AD 180 . London.
Gorrie, C. (2004) ‘Julia Domna’s Building Patronage, Imperial Family Roles and the Severan Revival of Moral Legislation’, Historia 53: 61–72.
Gradel, I. (2002) Emperor Worship and Roman Religion . Oxford.
Graves, R. (1934) I, Claudius . London.
Griffin, M. (1984) Nero: The End of a Dynasty . London.
——(1997) ‘The Senate’s Story’, Journal of Roman Studies 87: 249–63.
——(2000) ‘Nerva to Hadrian’, in Bowman, Garnsey and Rathbone (eds.).
Hall, L. J. (2004) Roman Berytus: Beirut in Late Antiquity . London.
Hallett, J. P. (1977) ‘Perusinae Glandes and the Changing Image of Augustus’, American Journal of Ancient History 2: 151–71.
——(1984) Fathers and Daughters in Roman Society: Women and the Elite Family . Princeton.
——(2002) ‘Women Writing in Rome and Cornelia, Mother of the Gracchi’, in L. J. Churchill, P. R. Brown and J. E. Jeffrey (eds.), Women Writing Latin: From Early Antiquity to Early Modern Europe , Vol. 1. New York and London.
Hamer, M. (1993) Signs of Cleopatra: History, Politics, Representation . London and New York.
——(2001) ‘The Myth of Cleopatra since the Renaissance’, in Walker and Higgs (eds.).
Harbus, A. (2002) Helena of Britain in Medieval Legend . Cambridge.
Harlow, M. (2004a) ‘Female Dress, Third–Sixth Century: The Messages in the Media?’, Antiquité Tardive 12: 203–15.
—–(2004b) ‘Galla Placidia: Conduit of Culture?’ in F. McHardy and E. Marshall (eds.), Women’s Influence on Classical Civilization . London and New York.
Haskell, F. and Penny, N. (1981) Taste and the Antique: The Lure of Classical Sculpture, 1500–1900 . New Haven, CT and London.
Heather, P. (2005) The Fall of the Roman Empire: A New History . London.
Heller, W. (2003) Emblems of Eloquence: Opera and Women’s Voices in Seventeenth-Century Venice . Berkeley.
Hemelrijk, E. H. (1999) Matrona Docta: Educated Women in the Roman Elite from Cornelia to Julia Domna . London.
——(2005) ‘Octavian and the Introduction of Public Statues for Women in Rome’, Athenaeum 93.1: 309–17.
Henderson, J. G. (1989) ‘Satire writes Woman: Gendersong’, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society 35: 50–80.
Herrin, J. (2001) Women in Purple: Rulers of Medieval Byzantium . London.
Hicks, P. (2005a) ‘The Roman Matron in Britain: Female Political Influence and Republican Response