From the earliest centuries of its existence, Rome was a community shaped by conflict. War was not merely an occasional undertaking but a defining rhythm of civic life, a recurring obligation of its citizens, and a central pillar of its political culture. Yet the story of Rome's wars is not simply the story of battles, generals, and conquests. It is the story of how a small city on the banks of the Tiber River came to dominate the most interconnected sea in the ancient world. It is the story of how the Mediterranean-its landscapes, peoples, economies, and rival powers-shaped Rome's rise, and how Rome, in turn, reshaped the Mediterranean into a new kind of political and cultural space. This book explores that long and complex relationship, tracing the evolution of Roman warfare and imperialism from the early Republic to the height of the Empire, and examining how war served as the engine of Rome's transformation into a Mediterranean superpower.
Related Subjects
History