Julius Caesar: A Reference Guide to His Life and Works
By (Author) Tom Stevenson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
22nd January 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Political science and theory
Biography: royalty
Hardback
352
Width 178mm, Height 254mm
Gaius Julius Caesar is one of the most influential men ever to have lived. He is inescapable as a figure of power and dominance and may be experienced directly and indirectly in myriad ways. Every day, people around the world measure their leaders against him, whether consciously or unconsciously. Political and military leaders may be praised or condemned for similarities to him. Even the Pope, as pontifex maximus, holds a position that evokes Caesars religious role in ancient Rome. Students and others read his accounts of the Gallic War and the Civil War and wonder about the contents of lost speeches and letters and other works. His calendar continues to govern our lives as thoroughly as any idea or institution possibly could. His portraits are somehow recognizable to those who have never studied them formally. His name evokes feelings of awe in people who have little detailed knowledge about why that should be so. His assassination on the Ides (15th) of March 44 BCE is repeated continuously on stages in every corner of the globe.
Julius Caesar: A Reference Guide to His Life and Works contains a chronology, an introduction, and an extensive bibliography. The dictionary section has cross-referenced entries on Caesars family and early career; his political and military achievements, including events in Rome and beyond, especially the major campaigns, his dictatorship years, and his assassination. Achievements in literature, oratory, architecture, portraiture, and intellectual discourse are given generous attention, as are prominent ideas and personalities of the age of Caesar.
Tom Stevenson worked for 35 years as a lecturer at the Universities of Sydney, Auckland, and Queensland, whence he retired in 2024 as Associate Professor of Classics and Ancient History. He served on various professional committees, including a stint as President of the Australasian Society for Classical Studies. His research is focused mainly on the politics and political ideas of Republican Rome in the first century BCE, with special attention to the careers of Caesar and Cicero, though in recent years he has also worked on historical novels and films set in the ancient world.