Caesar Against Rome: The Great Roman Civil War
By (Author) Ramon Jimenez
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
28th February 2000
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Ancient history
Ancient warfare
937.05
Hardback
304
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 societythe first society to display the ambition, greed, and intrigue of modern politicsin 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.
"Jimenez's narrative of the civil wars that ended the Roman Republic will be welcome alike to specialists and general readers. His well-organized chapters integrate state-of-the-art descriptions of the Roman way of war into clearly written accounts of sieges, skirmishes, and pitched battles on land and sea. Above all, however, this book tells the story of a man simultaneously a master of civil war's tactics and a failure at its policy levels....Pragmatism and public relations skills made him a formidable politician. Yet despite--or perhaps because of--these great gifts, Caesar failed to develop and articulate an idea of what should become of Rome....Rome might no longer be a republic, but it remained a society of law--not whim."-Dennis Showalter Department of History Colorado College
The narrative is clearly written and accompanied by useful maps...-The Journal of Military History
"The narrative is clearly written and accompanied by useful maps..."-The Journal of Military History
RAMON L. JIMNEZ, a freelance writer, has devoted much of the last ten years to studying and writing about Julius Caesar, the Celts, and the history of the late Roman Republic.