"Caesar Against Rome" is an absorbing narrative of the four-year
Roman Civil War that began with Caesar's crossing of the Rubicon in
49 BCE. Focusing always on Caesar, the book sketches a panorama of
Roman society--the first society to display the ambition, greed,
and intrigue of modern politics--in the last century before Christ.
Caesar was a complex and contradictory figure, extraordinarily
talented and extremely ambitious, but at the same time vain,
careless, and inclined to be forgiving. While Caesar's unusual
"clementia" was a major factor in winning popular support,
soldiers, and towns to his side, it allowed virtually all enemy
leaders to return to the battlefield against him.
Supplemented by the writings of other ancient historians as well
as the latest research, this book is based primarily on Caesar's
own detailed "Commentaries," written to explain and justify his
military campaigns. Those interested in Roman history will find a
wealth of information about every aspect of life in the late Roman
Republic, including political issues, class divisions, marriage
customs, travel, food, and entertainment. Military historians will
discover details about every facet of Roman warfare from weaponry
to personnel policy, to tactics, operations, and logistics. Single
chapters are devoted to each campaign: Greece, Africa, Spain, and
Egypt.
General
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