Ancient Rome: An Introductory History

Front Cover
University of Oklahoma Press, 2000 M07 1 - 320 pages

The events and personalities of ancient Rome spring to life in this history, from its founding in 753 B.C. to the death of the philosopher-emperor Marcus Aurelius in A.D. 180.

Paul A. Zoch presents, in contemporary language, the history of Rome and the stories of its protagonists?such as Romulus and Remus, Horatius, and Nero-which are so often omitted from more specialized studies.

With an eye detail, Zoch guides his readers through the military campaigns and political developments that shaped Rome’s rise from a small Italian city to the greatest imperial power the world had ever known. We witness the long struggle against the enemy city of Carthage. We follow Caesar as he campaigns in Britain, and we observe the ebb and flow of Rome’s fortunes in the Hellenistic East. Writing with the belief that such stories contain moral lessons that are relevant today, Zoch presents a narrative that is both entertaining and informative. An afterword takes the history to the fall of the Roman Empire in the West in A.D. 476.

 

Contents

Romulus and Remus Found Rome
3
Coriolanus Cincinnatus and Camillus
9
The Beginning of the End of the Res Publica
141
The War against Jugurtha and the Rise of Marius
149
The Italian Wars and the Career of Sulla
155
The Rise of Pompey
165
The First Triumvirate
175
Civil War
191
The Principate
227
The JulioClaudian Emperors
240
The Flavian Emperors
259
The Culmination of the Pax Romana
265
The Disintegration of the Empire
281
Bibliography
285
Index
289
3
294

Renewed Civil War and the Rise of Octavian
211

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About the author (2000)

Paul A. Zoch, a Houston-based educator with thirty-one years of experience teaching Latin and ancient Roman history, is the author of Doomed to Fail: The Built-In Defects of American Education.

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