Rome & the Sword

How Warriors & Weapons Shaped Roman History

$39.99

A striking new ‘bottom-up’ perspective on Roman history from the birth of Rome to the dawn of the Middle Ages, focusing on soldiers and their actions

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ISBN: 9780500251829 Category:

Simon James

Description

Today ancient Rome’s army is admired either as guardian of a brilliant civilization, or reviled as a brutal instrument of imperialism. The story of Rome and the sword seems a familiar one; yet it is in fact a modern myth obscuring a very different reality. Rome’s military was no ‘war machine’ made up of mindless cogs. There was not even an ancient term for ‘the Roman Army’; rather, Romans spoke of ‘the soldiers’ – of men, not institutions.

The rise of Rome depended on fearsome military prowess, backed up by an unprecedented willingness to accept conquered enemies into society as Romans. This combination of ‘the sword and the open hand’ built one of the world’s greatest empires. Yet under the emperors ‘the Roman army’ was far from the monolithic military machine that is generally assumed. The armies (plural) were multi-ethnic, often based far from Italy, and they established a military identity that quickly diverged from that of the civil centre. The soldiers could form well-disciplined fighting units, bearing murderously efficient weapons, but they were also habitually unruly, and could be as dangerous to their own citizens, to their emperors, or to each other, as to their enemies. Simon James brings thirty years’ study of Roman history and ancient military technology, and a vivid storytelling style, to this groundbreaking new account of how warriors and weapons both forged the Roman empire and sowed the seeds of its destruction.

Additional information

Weight 846 g
Dimensions 16.2 x 24.2 cm
Publisher name Thames and Hudson Ltd
Publication date 1 September 2011
Number of pages 328
Format Hardback
Dimensions 16.2 x 24.2 cm
Weight 846 g

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Simon James read archaeology at the London Institute of Archaeology, where he also took his PhD. He has been a Senior Lecturer in Archaeology at the University of Leicester since 2000.