This is an excellent piece of work, the most all-encompassing
single volume on ancient Rome that I've run across. Grant is
particularly good in the earliest eras of the Roman world.
It is very apparent that the greatest strengths of the polity were
there almost from the start-the rule of law, the voracious
absorption of territory and the clemency with which its conquered
peoples received in the interest of expanding the Roman population,
as well as the patron/client structure of social relations. Rome's
leaders were incredibly wise and forward thinking, all things
considered. The rock-solid sociopolitical structure lasted in
incredibly stable form, although constantly evolving and morphing
to meet new challenges, from inception to the Augustan period of
the first century AD, whereafter it started to fall apart slowly
and inexorably.
Grant's description of the Italian peninsula starting from a
collection of primitive Iron Age settlements to Roman hegemony is
compelling-too bad we lack the detailed names and biographies that
were to only emerge from the earliest surviving historical texts
around the 3rd century BC. So much is lost. Appius Claudius
(politician, lawmaker and builder) and Camillus (heroic general)
are a couple of the first giant figures to emerge from the
historical blankness.
The one thing that Grant makes so striking about ancient Rome is
its absolutely ruthless efficiency and iron will, nowhere better
exemplified in the total destruction of its main foes around 200
BC, Carthage and Corinth. Both were world powers in their own
right, but stood no chance against the Roman machine. I don't
subscribe to the popular notion, which Grant does, that the Romans
were more cruel, imperialistic or even evil than any of the other
major players of their time-I believe they were just so much better
at imposing their will. They were unparalleled at any time before
or since to the current day.
The book takes a different tack after the reign of Augustus,
becoming very a high level summary rather than a detailed
discussion. For example, the reigns of Claudius and Caligula are
dealt with in a couple of sentences rather than entire chapters,
which is unfortunate. The discourse stays at this high level
essentially for the remainder of the book.
Grant does an excellent job of periodically highlighting different
facets of Roman life outside the military and political, such as
its great poetry, sculpture and portraiture art, and authors and
legal philosophers. His synopses of the leading players are
excellent and edifying.
One difficulty with a book such as this that tries to cover a
period of over a millennium, at times it becomes a bit overwhelming
in the breadth of people, events and places that stream through in
high volumes. But overall, this is a superb book and exceedingly
well-done and readable. It is in my mind the best single reference
to ancient Rome that I have come across and a truly worthy
read.
He ends the book with a summary of the key reasons for the ultimate
fall of the Western Roman empire in 476. It is a pretty exhaustive
and insightful list, though nothing too earth shattering,
unanticipated or shocking.
In the back, the book also has a very intriguing catalog of the
ancient sources which really clarifies exactly what material all
modern historians have to base their works and conjecture on.
All in all, a very worthy and entertaining read.
Cheers.