Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Acoustic Simulation of Julius Caesar’s Battlefield Speeches

View through CrossRef
History contains many accounts of speeches given by civic and military leaders before large crowds prior to the invention of electronic amplification. Historians have debated the historical accuracy of these accounts, often making some reference to acoustics, either supporting or refuting the accounts, but without any numerical justification. The field of digital humanities, and more specifically archaeoacoustics, seeks to use computational techniques to provide empirical data to improve historical analysis. Julius Caesar recalled giving speeches to 14,000 men after the battle of Dyrrachium and another to 22,000 men before the battle of Pharsalus during the Roman Civil War. Caesar’s background and education are discussed, including his training in rhetoric and oratory, which would have affected his articulation and effective sound pressure level while addressing his troops. Based on subjective reports about Caesar’s oratorical abilities, his effective Sound Pressure Level (SPL) is assumed to be 80 dBA, about 6 dB above the average loud speaking voice but lower than that of the loudest trained actors and singers. Simulations show that for reasonable background noise conditions Caesar could have been heard intelligibly by 14,000 soldiers in a quiet, controlled environment as in the speech at Dyrrachium. In contrast, even granting generous acoustic and geometric conditions, Caesar could not have been heard by more than about 700 soldiers while his army was on the march before the battle of Pharsalus.
Title: Acoustic Simulation of Julius Caesar’s Battlefield Speeches
Description:
History contains many accounts of speeches given by civic and military leaders before large crowds prior to the invention of electronic amplification.
Historians have debated the historical accuracy of these accounts, often making some reference to acoustics, either supporting or refuting the accounts, but without any numerical justification.
The field of digital humanities, and more specifically archaeoacoustics, seeks to use computational techniques to provide empirical data to improve historical analysis.
Julius Caesar recalled giving speeches to 14,000 men after the battle of Dyrrachium and another to 22,000 men before the battle of Pharsalus during the Roman Civil War.
Caesar’s background and education are discussed, including his training in rhetoric and oratory, which would have affected his articulation and effective sound pressure level while addressing his troops.
Based on subjective reports about Caesar’s oratorical abilities, his effective Sound Pressure Level (SPL) is assumed to be 80 dBA, about 6 dB above the average loud speaking voice but lower than that of the loudest trained actors and singers.
Simulations show that for reasonable background noise conditions Caesar could have been heard intelligibly by 14,000 soldiers in a quiet, controlled environment as in the speech at Dyrrachium.
In contrast, even granting generous acoustic and geometric conditions, Caesar could not have been heard by more than about 700 soldiers while his army was on the march before the battle of Pharsalus.

Related Results

Julius Caesar, reception of
Julius Caesar, reception of
The reception of Caesar constitutes, for obvious reasons, an immense topic. As a political idea, Caesar exhibits from the very beginning a tension between his role as dictator and ...
Study on acoustic source characteristics of gas pipeline leakage
Study on acoustic source characteristics of gas pipeline leakage
The characteristics of acoustic source of gas pipeline leakage determine the accuracy and adaptability of leak detection for gas pipelines based on acoustic method. In order to exp...
Julius Caesar: The Gallic War Books V-VI
Julius Caesar: The Gallic War Books V-VI
Books V-VI of Julius Caesar’s The Gallic War narrate Caesar’s campaigns in Britain, Gaul, and Germany in 55 and 54 BCE. His political rival Pompey was at the height of his populari...
Julius Caesar (C. Iulius Caesar)
Julius Caesar (C. Iulius Caesar)
Abstract Julius Caesar (100–44 bce ) was a politician, general, and writer who reached a unique position of supremacy in the last yea...
GAİUS JULİUS CAESAR’İN İKTİDARA YÜKSELİŞİ
GAİUS JULİUS CAESAR’İN İKTİDARA YÜKSELİŞİ
Julius Caesar sadece Roma tarihinin değil aynı zamanda antik dünyanın en önemli isimlerinden biri olarak hatırlanmaya değerdir. Şüphesiz Roma’nın köklü ailelerinden birine mensup o...
Acoustic cloaking design based on penetration manipulation with combination acoustic metamaterials
Acoustic cloaking design based on penetration manipulation with combination acoustic metamaterials
The acoustic wave transmission manipulation ability is the most important performance for the acoustic metamaterials. To manipulate the acoustic transmission, the combination acous...
Cavalry since 1500
Cavalry since 1500
Cavalry, one of the three principal combat branches, has long been known as “the combat arm of decision.” This view, of a horse-mounted cavalry soldier delivering a charge at a gal...
Blind Source Separation of Transformer Acoustic Signal Based on Sparse Component Analysis
Blind Source Separation of Transformer Acoustic Signal Based on Sparse Component Analysis
In the acoustics-based power transformer fault diagnosis, a transformer acoustic signal collected by an acoustic sensor is generally mixed with a large number of interference signa...

Back to Top