Cambridge Catalogue  
  • Your account
  • View basket
  • Help
Home > Catalogue > The Breakdown of the Roman Republic

Details

  • 40 b/w illus. 5 maps
  • Page extent: 462 pages
  • Size: 228 x 152 mm
  • Weight: 0.8 kg
Add to basket

Hardback

 (ISBN-13: 9780521518192)

  • Published November 2009

In stock

 (Stock level updated: 01:50 GMT, 21 November 2009)

£50.00

In this book, Christopher Mackay recounts the last century of the Roman Republic in a readable, narrative treatment. Within this narrative he analyses the breakdown of the traditional Republican form of government as a result of the administrative and political crises brought about by the Roman conquest of the Mediterranean basin in the Middle Republic. He also shows how the many reforms instituted by Augustus, which effectively created the new imperial form of government, were a reaction to the failings of the Republic. Illustrated with an extensive collection of coin images that document the changes in contemporary political ideology, this volume also focuses on the political significance of the key personalities, including Marius, Sulla, and Caesar, who played a large role in the events that led to the demise of the Roman Republic.

• Not weighed down with overly technical discussions but fully aware of the latest academic thinking • The collection of coin images give a visually striking sense of the changes in Roman attitudes towards their leadership • Sophisticated analysis of events

Contents

1. Historical background; 2. Tribunate of Ti. Gracchus; 3. Tribunates of C. Gracchus; 4. Numidia, senatorial failures and the rise of C. Marius; 5. Ascendancy of C. Marius; 6. The Italian allies, M. Livius Drusus, and the social war; 7. Sulla, Marius and civil war; 8. Roman territorial expansion before the first Mithridatic war; 9. First Mithridatic war; 10. Sulla's victory in civil war; 11. Sulla's settlement; 12. The 70s B.C.: attacks on the Sullan Regime and the rise of Pompey; 13. Third Mithridatic War, war with the pirates, and the 60s B.C.: Rome in the absence of Pompey; 14. The ascendancy of Pompey; 15. Consulship of Cicero; 16. Consulship of C. Caesar; 17. Caesar in Gaul; 18. Last decade of the free republic; 19. Civil war and Caesar's victory; 20. Caesar's domination and assassination; 21. Turmoil after the ides of March; 22. Struggle of the warlords; 23. Final showdown.

printer iconPrinter friendly versionemail iconEmail a colleague AddThis