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SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome 1st Edition, Kindle Edition

4.4 out of 5 stars 11,563 ratings

New York Times Bestseller

A
New York Times Notable Book

Named one of the Best Books of the Year by the
Wall Street Journal, the Economist, Foreign Affairs, and Kirkus Reviews

Finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award (Nonfiction)

Shortlisted for the Cundill Prize in Historical Literature

Finalist for the
Los Angeles Times Book Prize (History)

A
San Francisco Chronicle Holiday Gift Guide Selection

A
New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice Selection


A sweeping, "magisterial" history of the Roman Empire from one of our foremost classicists shows why Rome remains "relevant to people many centuries later" (Atlantic).


 


In SPQR, an instant classic, Mary Beard narrates the history of Rome "with passion and without technical jargon" and demonstrates how "a slightly shabby Iron Age village" rose to become the "undisputed hegemon of the Mediterranean" (Wall Street Journal). Hailed by critics as animating "the grand sweep and the intimate details that bring the distant past vividly to life" (Economist) in a way that makes "your hair stand on end" (Christian Science Monitor) and spanning nearly a thousand years of history, this "highly informative, highly readable" (Dallas Morning News) work examines not just how we think of ancient Rome but challenges the comfortable historical perspectives that have existed for centuries. With its nuanced attention to class, democratic struggles, and the lives of entire groups of people omitted from the historical narrative for centuries, SPQR will to shape our view of Roman history for decades to come.

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Popular Highlights in this book

Editorial Reviews

Review

"[Beard] is no myth builder; she is a scholar who reaches down-to-earth conclusions based on her years of dedication to her subject…. She is able to step back to see the entire Roman world…. She shows us how to engage with the history, culture, and controversies that made Rome―and why it still matters. Beard's enthusiasm for her subject is infectious…. Lovers of Roman history will revel in this work, and new students will quickly become devotees."
Kirkus Reviews, Starred Review

"[Fun] helps define what sets Beard apart as commentator and what sets
SPQR apart from other histories of Rome. Though she here claims that 50 years of training and study have led up to SPQR, Beard wears her learning lightly. As she takes us through the brothels, bars, and back alleys where the populus Romanus left their imprint, one senses, above all, that she is having fun."
James Romm, New Republic

"This book tracks the rise of Rome from backwater village to imperial city, spreading its power from Syria to Spain by 63 BCE, staring down resisters, and originating the idea of nation and citizenship. Included here are the stories not just of Julius Caesar but the butcher, the baker, and the candlestick maker―and certainly women and slaves."
Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal

"In
SPQR, her wonderful concise history, Mary Beard unpacks the secrets of the city’s success with a crisp and merciless clarity that I have not seen equaled anywhere else…. We tend to think of the Romans as coarser successors to the Greeks. Yet Beard, who doubles as a Cambridge professor and a television lecturer of irresistible salty charm, shows us how the Roman Republic got underway at almost the same time as the Athenian democracy. And it evolved into just the kind of mixed system that sophisticated commentators like Aristotle and Polybius approved of."
Ferdinand Mount, New York Times Book Review

"Monumental…. A triumphant Roman read that is sure to appear on school curricula and holiday wishlists alike."
Carly Silver, Shelf Awareness

"Where
SPQR differs most from the standard history is in its clear-sighted honesty…. Beard tells this story precisely and clearly, with passion and without technical jargon…. SPQR is a grim success story, but one told with wonderful flair."
Greg Woolf, The Wall Street Journal

"Beard does precisely what few popularizers dare to try and plenty of dons can’t pull off: She conveys the thrill of puzzling over texts and events that are bound to be ambiguous, and she complicates received wisdom in the process. Her magisterial new history of Rome,
SPQR…is no exception…. The ancient Romans, Beard shows, are relevant to people many centuries later who struggle with questions of power, citizenship, empire, and identity."
Emily Wilson, The Atlantic

"A masterful new chronicle…. Beard is a sure-footed guide through arcane material that, in other hands, would grow tedious. Sifting myth from fact in dealing with the early history of the city, she enlivens―and deepens―scholarly debates by demonstrating how the Romans themselves shaped their legendary beginnings to short-term political ends…. Exemplary popular history, engaging but never dumbed down, providing both the grand sweep and the intimate details that bring the distant past vividly to life."
The Economist

About the Author

Mary Beard is the author of the best-selling The Fires of Vesuvius and the National Book Critics Circle Award–nominated Confronting the Classics and SPQR. A popular blogger and television personality, Beard is a regular contributor to the New York Review of Books. She lives in England.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ B0108U7IHO
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Liveright
  • Accessibility ‏ : ‎ Learn more
  • Publication date ‏ : ‎ November 9, 2015
  • Edition ‏ : ‎ 1st
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • File size ‏ : ‎ 97.3 MB
  • Screen Reader ‏ : ‎ Supported
  • Enhanced typesetting ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • X-Ray ‏ : ‎ Not Enabled
  • Word Wise ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Print length ‏ : ‎ 607 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9781631491252
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1631491252
  • Page Flip ‏ : ‎ Enabled
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 out of 5 stars 11,563 ratings

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Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
11,563 global ratings

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Customers say

Customers find this history book engaging and well-written, with one review noting its ability to contextualize ancient events. Moreover, the book provides excellent analysis of the founding of Rome and makes the subject fascinating. However, customers disagree on the book's length, with some finding it too long. Additionally, the scholarly content receives mixed reactions, with some finding it not very engrossing.

381 customers mention "Readability"351 positive30 negative

Customers find the book highly readable, describing it as an amazing and enthralling read that does not disappoint.

"...SPQR is a meaty work with a lot of events, analysis and ideas to digest...." Read more

"...In conclusion, "SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome" is a compelling and deeply researched work that offers valuable insights into the complexities of..." Read more

"...quite engaging. As Rome became richer and more powerful, it was transformed from an oligarchic republic to a failed state...." Read more

"...Thoroughly enjoyable author...." Read more

363 customers mention "Information quality"335 positive28 negative

Customers find the book informative and enlightening, describing it as a scholarly work that opens up the history of Rome, with interesting tidbits throughout.

"...in favor of a more thematic approach, peppering her history with insights and personal perspectives...." Read more

"...It gives the reader a vivid insight into the various lives of the Romans, from emperor to slave." Read more

"...The variety of historical evidence used - and they way in which it was used - to breathe life into these people is an example of a master historian..." Read more

"...similar information. History comes alive through people----people's characters, eccentricities, lives, loves, and careers...." Read more

363 customers mention "Pacing"298 positive65 negative

Customers appreciate the book's pacing, finding it well-told and easy to read as a work by a true scholar, while also being magnificently detailed and offering a vivid narrative.

"...The book is very well written in a conversational style and was on the NYT Bestseller List as well as being a Finalist for the National Book Critics..." Read more

"Mary Beard writes in a breezy, often anecdotal, style which makes her book both informative and entertaining...." Read more

"...of the "common" Roman, I thought Beard did a remarkable job of painting a picture of what it meant for the average citizen to be a Roman..." Read more

"...Engaging Writing Style:** Beard's writing is both scholarly and accessible...." Read more

236 customers mention "History"207 positive29 negative

Customers praise the book's historical content, particularly its analysis of Rome's founding and political development, with one customer highlighting its fascinating insights into the lives of ordinary Romans.

"...few authors can, a learned piece of scholarship that advances our understanding of Roman times that is as much admired by her academic peers at is..." Read more

"...Beard challenges traditional narratives and invites readers to reconsider established assumptions about Rome's history and its impact on the modern..." Read more

"Mary Beard is perhaps the best known and most popular historian of Ancient Rome. After reading SPQR, I can understand why...." Read more

"...A good starting point that doesn’t focus too much on any specific area but allows readers to narrow down what area of Roman history they might want..." Read more

80 customers mention "Entertainment value"80 positive0 negative

Customers find the book entertaining, describing it as a fascinating and engaging general history that keeps readers interested and is extremely fun to listen to.

"...often anecdotal, style which makes her book both informative and entertaining...." Read more

"...It is a very well-done and interesting discussion of what that meant -- and what it didn't, and the varied reactions of the newly enfranchised...." Read more

"This book is a masterpiece of history. Exciting, easy to understand, and comprehensive. An effortless, satisfying read...." Read more

"...of a unifying criterion that sounded to me at once serviceable, interesting, and original...." Read more

23 customers mention "Length"13 positive10 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's length, with several finding it too long.

""SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome" by Mary Beard offers an expansive and nuanced exploration of one of history's most influential civilizations...." Read more

"...The book is exhaustive, and it was hard for me as a reader to go through more than a handful of pages at a time...." Read more

"This is a big book. That is it covers big themes over a large stretch of time, the first Roman Millennium, from the founding of the city to the..." Read more

"...My only minor beef is that there are many long passages that seemingly could have been shortened and, perhaps beneficially, allowed a discourse of..." Read more

22 customers mention "Social context"13 positive9 negative

Customers have mixed opinions about the book's social context, with some appreciating its in-depth look at social aspects, while one customer finds the focus on military and militaristic culture unacceptable, and another notes there is little discussion of military topics.

"...cold but is very adept in explaining it in an engaging and non-condescending manner...." Read more

"...Fun book, but unfocused, and ultimately wishywashy." Read more

"...It is also, whenever the historical evidence permits it, about ordinary people, laws, institutions, and inequality...." Read more

"...provided an in depth look at Roman politics, conflicts, origins, and people...." Read more

129 customers mention "Scholarly content"37 positive92 negative

Customers find the scholarly content of the book unengaging, repetitive, and confusing.

"...of Ancient Rome" rather than "The History..." This isn't a crisp chronological narration of events...." Read more

"...Roman players in the Republic and early Empire, but their stories alone don't make history...." Read more

"...Beard eschews a strictly chronological narrative in favor of a more thematic approach, peppering her history with insights and personal perspectives..." Read more

"...Cons:** - **Overwhelming Detail:** At times, the sheer amount of information and the dense presentation can be overwhelming, particularly for..." Read more

A Deep Dive into Roman History"
5 out of 5 stars
A Deep Dive into Roman History"
"SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome" by Mary Beard offers an expansive and nuanced exploration of one of history's most influential civilizations. As someone deeply interested in history, I approached this book with high expectations, intrigued by the promise of insights into the Roman Republic and Empire. While there were aspects of the book I appreciated, my overall experience was mixed. **Pros:** - **Comprehensive Coverage:** Beard does an exceptional job of covering a vast period, from the foundation of Rome in the 8th century BC to the fall of the Western Roman Empire in the 5th century AD. Her ability to distill complex historical events into engaging narratives is commendable. - **Engaging Writing Style:** Beard's writing is both scholarly and accessible. She has a knack for bringing historical figures and events to life, making the reader feel as though they're witnessing history unfold. - **Thought-Provoking Analysis:** The book shines in its analysis of Roman society, politics, and culture. Beard challenges traditional narratives and invites readers to reconsider established assumptions about Rome's history and its impact on the modern world. **Cons:** - **Overwhelming Detail:** At times, the sheer amount of information and the dense presentation can be overwhelming, particularly for readers new to Roman history. Those looking for a light introduction might find SPQR a challenging starting point. - **Lack of Chronological Flow:** The book's thematic approach, while offering deep dives into specific aspects of Roman life, sometimes disrupts the chronological flow of history. This can make it difficult to follow the overall progression of Roman history. - **Limited Focus on Certain Periods:** While SPQR covers a broad timeline, certain periods and events receive less attention than others. Readers interested in specific epochs might find the coverage uneven. In conclusion, "SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome" is a compelling and deeply researched work that offers valuable insights into the complexities of Roman history. Mary Beard's expertise and passion for the subject are evident throughout. However, the book's density and thematic structure may not cater to all tastes, particularly those seeking a more straightforward chronological history or a lighter read. For those willing to engage with its depth and complexity, SPQR provides a rewarding exploration of ancient Rome's legacy.
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Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2019
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    A ubiquitous commentator on affairs both ancient and domestic in her native Great Britain, Mary Beard is something of an institution. Her latest written work, SPQR, is an interpretive history of ancient Rome aimed at a lay audience. Beard eschews a strictly chronological narrative in favor of a more thematic approach, peppering her history with insights and personal perspectives. It seems to me that any prospective reader should already have a firm grasp on the basics of Roman history, although the litany of awards SPQR has garnered, including New York Times Bestseller status, suggests that many disagree.

    Beard begins her history at the dawn of Roman civilization and ends with Emperor Caracalla’s grant of citizenship to everyone living in the empire in 212 AD. She starts by writing that Rome’s seven kings were likely more myth than reality. It is highly unlikely, she says, that just seven men served over the course of 250 years. It is noteworthy, she says, that many of the enduring features of Roman life were introduced by the kings. “Abominated as they were, kings were credited with creating Rome,” Beard writes. For instance, Numa created much of Rome’s religion and Servius Tullius developed the census and the associated centuriate assembly system that gave weight to the wealthier classes. Moreover, some of the kings were clearly Etruscan in background, which underscored from the earliest days that Roman leaders could come from outside of the city, a key theme of Roman self-identify. Much like the United States, Rome was a city of asylum where anyone could rise to the top.

    Next Beard turns to the Republic, which she is quick to note did not spring full grown in the wake of the rape of Lucretia in 509 BC. Rather, she argues, it took centuries for the Republic of Cicero’s day to develop. Major turning points occurred in the early fourth century BC. First came the Roman destruction of Veii, Rome’s Trojan War, in 396, and then the sack of Rome by the Gauls in 390 BC. The pattern of conquest and fear of conquest was thus established, she writes. “Roman military expansion drove Roman sophistication.” The sophistication in building the massive defensive walls around the city and the logistics of incorporating large contingents of allied forces required “infrastructure unthinkable in the fifth century.” Next, in 367 BC, the plebs were allowed to stand for the consulship. Henceforth, Beard writes, being a patrician “carried a whiff of snobbery attached to it and not much more.”

    Beard agrees with the historian Polybius who saw the Roman political system as responsible for the success of the city during the Republic. The mixed constitution provided the state with strength and stability. She writes that the tradition of ancestor worship and the competition for political office and military spoils is what drove the expansion of empire, not any formal plan of imperial conquest. It was a coercive empire, she says, not one of annexation. The Latin word imperium meant “the power to issue orders that are obeyed,” and that is what the Roman’s did. However, the influx of conquered people and wealth would challenge what it meant to be traditionally Roman.

    Next, she points to the year 146 BC as a turning point, the year both Carthage and Corinth were razed. Roman violence was suddenly turned inward, beginning with the controversial tribunates of the Gracchi brothers. The road to Augustus, she claims, runs directly from the brothers to Marius versus Sulla and then Pompey versus Caesar. Each did their part to undermine key elements of the Republican system that led inexorably to dictatorship. The feud of the Gracchi brothers introduced violence to the domestic political process. The reforms of Marius allowed men without property to serve, thus turning the army into “a new style of personal militia” directly controllable by only the commanding general. Sulla added the military march on Rome and Roman soldiers spilling Roman blood, not to mention proscriptions and reviving the dictatorship. Pompey, for his part, climbed to the top of the political system outside of the natural order of the Republic, gaining commands without officially holding office. Caesar was just a culmination of his predecessors’ careers.

    Beard affirms the remarkable legacy of Augustus in the transition from Republic to Empire, “a puzzling and contradictory revolutionary.” Perhaps his greatest reform – and certainly his most expensive – was the introduction of pensions for soldiers. No longer were the Roman legions dependent on their commander for taking care of them. Now after 20 years of service soldiers received 12 years salary or the equivalent in land. The reform cost an estimated 450 sesterces or half of the annual imperial income. But it effectively removed the army from politics, at least for the time being. Augustus also made the Senate hereditary for three generations and allowed the Senate’s bills to have the weight of law. Now that Augustus was solely responsible for receiving positions in the imperial infrastructure, elections slowly died off and the old patron/client system, once the bedrock of Roman society and politics, was rendered nugatory. Although Augustus held the consulship 13 times, the position had largely become symbolic. The Roman Republic was dead but kept alive as fiction by filling old positions and offices. Or as Beard explains it, “Augustus was cleverly adapting the traditional idioms to serve a new politics justifying and making comprehensible a new axis of power by systematically reconfiguring the old language.”

    Concerning the first two centuries of emperors, Beard writes that for all of their idiosyncrasies and outlandish behavior they were far more similar than they were different. “There is no sign at all,” she writes, “that the character of the ruler affected the basic template of government at home or abroad in any significant way.” Moreover, “there was hardly any such thing as a general policy for running the empire or an overarching strategy of military deployment.” The emperor did represent a new tier in the structure of command, but “his role was largely a reactive one; he was not a strategist or forward planner.” The truth was that the emperorship provided “a remarkably stable structure of rule,” at least for the first two centuries of the empire. Between ascension of Augustus in 31 BC and the assassination of Commodus in 192 AD there were just 14 emperors (not counting the three short-term emperors of 69 AD). In a period half as long, between 193 and 293, there were no fewer than 70. For all of its stability, however, succession was an enduring challenge, as naming a new emperor always came down to “some combination of luck, improvisation, plotting, violence and secret deals.”

    In closing, SPQR is a marvelous synthesis of one renowned scholar’s take on one thousand years of Roman history. I’ve read much Roman history, particularly the Republican period, but I learned a lot from SPQR. I suspect Beard has delivered something very few authors can, a learned piece of scholarship that advances our understanding of Roman times that is as much admired by her academic peers at is enjoyed by the general educated public.
    128 people found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on February 12, 2025
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    522 pages of text/figures [103 figures]; 16 pages of 21 color plates; 6 pages of maps; 26 pages of "Further Reading"; 10 page Timeline; and 2 pages of Acknowledgements. The subtitle of the book is "A History of Ancient Rome" rather than "The History..." This isn't a crisp chronological narration of events. The author chews on a number of general topics such as politics, violence, slavery, cultural beliefs, citizenship, marriage, economics/living standards, and civil strife in a loosely chronological fashion. The book is very well written in a conversational style and was on the NYT Bestseller List as well as being a Finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award for nonfiction. I downgraded it in my rating because I was looking for a book with more detail. The rating indicates my error in choosing to buy it rather than any defect in the book itself. I would certainly recommend it to someone looking to anyone looking for an overview of Roman history up to 212 CE or anyone very familiar with Roman history who wants to be challenged with a synthesis of deeper meanings to be extracted from the history.
    One person found this helpful
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  • Reviewed in the United States on January 25, 2016
    Format: KindleVerified Purchase
    Mary Beard writes in a breezy, often anecdotal, style which makes her book both informative and entertaining. SPQR covers the history of ancient Rome from its founding by Romulus to the reign of Emperor Caracalla, who, in the year 202 A.D. granted Roman citizenship to the entire free male population of the empire. This is a very ambitious work and is well worth reading. Beard not only delves into the history of ancient Rome, but also has a lot to say about its sociology. She concerns herself not only with the famous personages but also with the lower classes and their lives, with long glimpses of what went on in the bars and eateries where the ordinary people hung out. In one such establishment in Pompeii, there was a frieze picturing seven notable Greek philosophers, but rather than discussing deep philosophical topics, they are depicted as giving scatological advice. She also writes extensively on the conditions of women, slaves and freed slaves.
    Beard at times seems to have a cynical attitude toward the Romans; at least, toward the movers and shakers. For example, she says about the civil war between Caesar and Pompey: “The irony was that Pompey, their figurehead, was no less an autocrat than Caesar. Whichever side won, as Cicero again observed, the result was to be much the same: slavery for Rome. What came to be seen as a war between liberty and one man rule was really a war to choose between rival emperors.” Personally, I have a bit of difficulty swallowing this, because Pompey, as egotistical as he was, had ample opportunities to march on Rome and take over as dictator in the manner of Sulla and Caesar, but he never did. And if Cato the Younger, arguably the most obstinately principled notable in history, believed that Pompey had the same ambitions as Caesar to become an autocrat, we would have declared “plague on both your houses” and stayed home rather than followed Pompey into exile.
    Beard relies on the writings of Cicero for much of her analysis, and she gives him extensive coverage in SPQR. This is understandable since more of Cicero’s writings have survived than any other writer of his time.
    Beard has no liking for Augustus, and at one point refers to him as a “reptile.” She does make it very clear that he was a man of remarkable gifts, able to walk that tightrope of Roman power and gaining support of the Roman elite where his Great Uncle Julius Caesar failed to do so. It probably helped that the proscriptions of the second triumvirate killed off most of the opposition. Under Augustus’ rule the Senate ceased to be a governing body and turned into a sort of civil service. Any opposition that wasn’t killed off was bought off. She describes Augustus as “a poacher turned game keeper.”
    Beard also makes the point that during the next two hundred years after the end of the Republic it didn’t really matter who the emperor was or whether he was “good” or “bad.” I need to take some issue with that notion as well. If an emperor was particularly rapacious, as in the case of Nero, it could cause considerable unrest in the provinces. It was Nero’s instructions to confiscate the lands and possessions of Prasutagus, the husband of Boudicca, upon his death, that led to Boudicca’s rebellion which destroyed three Roman cities and killed an estimated 70 to 80 thousand Romans and Britons. One wonders if the same thing would have happened under a less rapacious Emperor. One suspects that Nero’s rapaciousness was also one of the causes of the full scale revolt that took place in Judea toward the end of his reign. None of the 14 emperors during this period were really “good” by modern standards, but some were more rapacious than others, and the quality of the emperor did have an effect on the running of the empire.
    SPQR is a meaty work with a lot of events, analysis and ideas to digest. It gives the reader a vivid insight into the various lives of the Romans, from emperor to slave.
    34 people found this helpful
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Top reviews from other countries

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  • Jimmy
    5.0 out of 5 stars One the great popular history books to come out of the recent years
    Reviewed in Canada on April 5, 2024
    Format: PaperbackVerified Purchase
    I thoroughly enjoyed it. It shapes a new understanding of what the early days of Rome really were like according to actual records and archeology, not the myths we all heard about (while not discarding it completely).

    It also shapes a new identity of what it meant to be Roman and the history and reality of regular folks living in those days.

    If you are interested in the ancient world and already know a thing or two about it, this is a book you will enjoy.
  • Andres
    5.0 out of 5 stars Intense
    Reviewed in Mexico on December 17, 2024
    Not the story of Rome you want but story of Rome you need. An extremely insightful work by Mary Beard into the history of Ancient Rome, its emperors, citizens, slaves and whatnot.

    First chapters may scream challenging book, but as the book progresses, you’ll see why the Author provides such rich content and notice that you have actually learned something.

    Thank you MB
  • Anselm
    5.0 out of 5 stars Roman history for grownups
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 18, 2019
    “History is just one damned thing after another”, goes a famous quote. And that’s what many introductory history books sound like: “First this happened, then that happened”. They might go as far as investigating causation (“this happened because that happened”) and even context (“this happened because of these circumstances”). But they don’t take the next step.

    I’m currently reading in parallel Michael Burleigh’s book and Richard Evans’ trilogy on the Third Reich. They’re of this type. Now, that’s no criticism. For history that recent, the facts are going to be well-established enough not to warrant discussion in the main text, at least in a book intended for general rather than specialist readership. Sources can be relegated to footnotes for those keen and knowledgeable enough to follow them up. The facts material to, say, Hitler’s assumption of the German Chancellorship in January 1933 are not in dispute, and a lay reader like me is content to assume that the historian has done their homework with the sources, and to get on with following the narrative.

    Ancient history is different. There are gaps. That’s also true of modern history, of course, but those in its ancient counterpart are so fundamental that a simple narrative history is actually misleading, because to say the equivalent of “Hitler assumed the Chancellorship on January 30th 1933” might very well not be true at all. How do we know he did? Because sources tell us. But what are those sources for ancient history?

    When we’re told that in 509 BCE Lucius Junius Brutus forced Tarquinus Superbus, the last of the Roman kings, into exile in order to establish the liberty of the Roman people, that Tarquin made an alliance with the Etruscan king Lars Porsenna and besieged Rome in order to get his throne back, that the Etruscan army was prevented from crossing a key bridge across the Tiber by Horatius Cocles defending it single-handed, or almost single-handed, that the Etruscans abandoned the siege out of admiration for Roman spunk, and that Tarquinus’ Latin allies were finally defeated at the Battle of Lake Regillus in 499 BCE, it comes as something of a shock to then read in Beard’s “SPQR” that “it is only in the first century BCE that we can start to explore Rome, close up and in vivid detail, through contemporary eyes.” The earliest author to describe these foundational events is the historian Livy, writing in the time of Caesar Augustus, the first Roman emperor, half a millennium later. That raises the obvious question of how reliable this information about a series of events at least as significant for ancient Rome as Hitler’s accession to the Chancellorship was for Weimar Germany actually is.

    This is the kind of question that’s at the heart of Beard’s book. On one level, it’s a history of ancient Rome from its foundation to 212 CE. As such, as pointed out by several previous reviewers (both positive and negative), it requires at least a basic knowledge of the subject. Noting these comments, I read all the Wikipedia articles on ancient Rome and its various aspects before embarking on this book. I was glad I did, although I’m not convinced I needed to. If, like one reviewer, I had complained about Beard's skimpy treatment of, say, the Punic Wars, I would have missed what her book actually is.

    As much as a history of Rome, it's a history of the history of Rome. It asks the raft of questions that are an essential part of what we “know” (yes, that’s “know” in quotation marks) about it. How do we know what we think we know about a particular event or set of circumstances? What are the primary sources? How long after the event were they written? Why did the authors write what they did? For whom? Should we merely take their words at face value, or read them “against the grain”? What additional information can this reading between the lines reveal? How representative of his world and his time is a single main source for a whole period, like Cicero for the late Republic and the Civil Wars? How well does one source triangulate with othera(s)? What happens if they contradict one another? And how does all this tie in with archaeology?

    This “history of history” is just as exciting a story as the one about “what actually happened”, and not just because the former is foundational to the latter. Even in contemporary history it enters the picture when, for example, David Irving’s misrepresentations of evidence are brought to light in his discussions of the Holocaust and the bombing of Dresden. We trust historians to do their work honestly, and nothing is as honest as actually showing the basis of your conclusions. It’s like a medieval timber-framed house in which the supporting structural members are a prominent feature of the design rather than being hidden behind an elegant facade. Beard does this par excellence in “SPQR”, elegantly combining the story with the story of the story in one engrossing narrative.

    One model of history is the “Great Man” (yes, almost invariably “man”, unless we’re talking about great singers) view, in which the narrative consists of the doings of individual figures who are said to exercise a decisive influence on their societies. For ancient Rome, this would be the Mariuses and Sullas, the Pompeys and Caesars. From Augustus on, the history of Rome on this reading is of course the history of the emperors.

    This is partly due to the simple fact that it tends to be the rich and powerful who leave the traces in the record. They build the buildings that survive, they command the armies that win (or lose) and that determine the fates of thousands and millions, it is their doings that are the subjects of sculpture and painting and monument and writing. The proles, meanwhile, pass unnoticed and unremarked unless they riot or rebel. Beard points out that the Roman Empire consisted primarily of some 50 million people, most of them peasant farmers who remain undifferentiated and anonymous because pretty much all evidence of them has vanished. Palaces can survive; peasant huts tend not to. But we do have some hope of reconstructing, to some degree, the lives, at least in the aggregate, of city dwellers, especially those million inhabitants of Rome who weren’t the few thousand elites. This is largely thanks to archaeology.

    That’s why, if I had to choose my favourite chapter in the whole book, it would probably be Chapter 11, in which Beard determines just how much the evidence can tell us about the plebs. The answer is: more than you might think. Most Romans lived in “insulae”, multi-story apartment blocks, which is how a million could be crammed into such a relatively small footprint. Where and how they lived, what and where they ate and what they spent their little money on can all be determined, at least sufficiently for a mildly imaginative historical novelist to reconstruct an urban Roman scene and to get inside the heads of its ordinary citizens. Three conclusions would surprise us: Rome wasn’t zoned (the poor lived cheek by jowl with the rich throughout the city), the best apartments in insulae were on the lower, not the upper floors, and poor people ate out while rich ones dined at home.

    Parallel to her examination of ordinary lives, Beard tries to determine what the impact on Rome was throughout the Empire. How much did Roman rule affect the inhabitants of Gaul or Egypt or Asia (i.e. modern western Turkey)? What did “being Roman” actually mean to a rural inhabitant of what is now Western Europe? How far down did "Romanisation" extend into the conquered societies?

    And what did it mean to Romans themselves? This is a theme to which Beard periodically returns. We all have an image of our society, certain assumptions we tacitly make about our culture. It’s part of our mental makeup, the part that relates to our corporate rather than individual identities. What were Romans’ attitudes to Rome? These are intimately entwined (and perhaps enshrined?) in their city’s history, which was actually largely mythical – certainly the more so the further back it went. What they “knew” about Romulus and Remus and Aeneas reflected their own ambivalence, which was expressed in various ways throughout the near-millennium that it took for Rome to rise from an average Latin hilltop settlement whose wars were fought against enemies ten miles distant to superpower status.

    Much of this evidence is, of course, skimpy in the extreme, far too much so to draw concrete conclusions. Beard again makes clear when this is so, and what such consensus or disagreement as there may be among historians and archaeologists on a given topic are. The only thing I wish she had specified is in her closing: in her discussion of the Arch of Constantine, I feel she could have made the difference between the figures on it that were recycled from earlier monuments and those freshly carved for it clear, in order to illustrate artistically her thesis about the new nature of the Empire after 212 CE.

    The Kindle version works as well as you could expect. There's X-ray, for what it's worth, and the index is active as well as the table of contents. A minor exception is the (very useful) timeline at the end, which comes across as some kind of PDF. The fairly small font can’t be enlarged, and its various sections are of slightly different sizes, so you have to squint a bit. But it’s worth it – as is the entire book. If you want to know what happened in ancient Rome, read an introductory work. If you want to understand ancient Rome and how we’ve come to know about it, this is the book for you.
  • Julio Cesar de M. Sproesser
    5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful !
    Reviewed in Brazil on March 11, 2025
    Format: HardcoverVerified Purchase
    Wonderful !
  • Giuseppe Chimento
    5.0 out of 5 stars SPQR: You must read it!
    Reviewed in Italy on July 7, 2016
    Un libro straordinario. Per l'impostazione innanzi tutto: l'inizio "in medias res" (la congiura di Catilina), tale da catturare - da subito - l'attenzione del lettore. Per la trattazione scorrevole, ma mai banale, che ti fa vivere e toccare con mano lo sforzo e l'emozione dello storico che trae i segni di una possibile verità da reperti della natura più disparata (una lapide tombale di struttura palmirena scavata in Inghilterra, un rostro punico ripescato nelle acque siciliane, e tanto, tanto altro ancora). Per la capacità narrativa e di sintesi che consente all'autrice di racchiudere in poco più di 500 densissime pagine mille anni di storia, dalla fondazione di Roma all'editto di Caracalla, che attribuì la cittadinanza romana a tutti i liberi residenti entro i confini dell'impero.
    Ne viene fuori un quadro affascinante, innanzi tutto - ne sono sicuro - per la stessa autrice, che ha la capacità di trasmettere al lettore questa sua emozione i fronte a una civiltà variegata e inclusiva, nella quale hanno convissuto popoli diversissimi per livello di civilizzazione, per etnia, per lingua. La sterminata bibliografia proposta (ma, ovviamente, non esaustiva come la stessa autrice ammette) è fondamentalmente limitata ai testi in lingua inglese, a parte, naturalmente, i documenti originali latini o greci, per i quali, comunque si propongono le traduzioni o i siti web ove rintracciarle. Non so se questa sia stata una scelta dell'autrice, fatta considerando che il volume è indirizzato a non specialisti come me, ma è comunque istruttivo per un italiano (anche se io ho letto il volume in lingua inglese) scoprire quanti studiosi fuori d'Italia dedicano la propria attività professionale alla storia della civiltà romana. E per lo più si tratta, è importante dirlo, di studi assai recenti.
    In conclusione: se siete appassionati di storia in genere e di storia romana in particolare, dovete leggere questo libro; se non lo siete cominciate a leggerlo ugualmente: appassionerà anche voi.
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