The Parthians at War: Combat, Logistics, Reputation, and the First War with Rome
By (Author) Nikolaus Leo Overtoom
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
13th November 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Political science and theory
Military history
Hardback
336
Width 152mm, Height 229mm
The Parthians at War is the first ever comprehensive scholarly attempt to evaluate and understand the military capabilities and accomplishments of the greatest enemy of the Seleucids and Romans, the Parthians.
It draws on a wide variety of sources to reassess the militarism of the Parthians and origins and events of their first war with Rome. This book emphasizes source criticism of Greco-Roman writers to challenge traditional Rome-centric understandings of the Parthians and their military success by considering, as much as possible, the Parthians and their agency on their own terms. In it the Parthians are capable, aggressive, and successful actors on the world stage and the role of the Romans, particularly that of the villainized Crassus, in the beginning of the rivalry between Parthia and Rome is reconsidered drastically. It treats broader issues of militarism and logistics, state decision-making, royal identity and ideology, imperial rivalry, propaganda, and state security concerns. It concludes that the innovations of the Parthian military were exceptional and that the realities of the origins and legacy of the first war between Parthia and Rome are drastically different from the traditional narrative.
Nikolaus Leo Overtoom is Associate Professor in Ancient History at Washington State University.