The Roman Way
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- USD 0.99
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- USD 0.99
Descripción editorial
This book looks at ancient Rome from the inside—how Romans judged right and wrong, what they admired, and what they feared. Instead of a strict year-by-year history, it follows Roman voices and the lives behind them: statesmen, poets, philosophers, soldiers, and emperors. Their words and choices show a culture shaped by law, duty, and public honor, but also by ambition, pleasure, and cruelty. It also points out how Roman practical thinking often differed from Greek ideals.
Across about six centuries, the focus stays on everyday ideas as much as great events. Topics include family and citizenship, religion and superstition, education, work, wealth, entertainment, and the hard facts of war and empire. Scenes range from the senate and the law courts to the camp and the crowded city streets.
Writers such as Cicero, Virgil, Horace, Livy, Seneca, Tacitus, and Juvenal help reveal what it meant to live as a Roman—and why Rome’s habits and assumptions still echo in the modern world.