Ratings120
Average rating4
Although I do not doubt the credibility of this book's various claims, this was a poor history. The chapters jump between periods and narratives so frequently that I found no use in attempting to form a conceptual sequence of events. A “history of Rome” is simply too great a task for any single publication to accomplish, and this book ends up disjointed and spread thin over many concepts.
Z jednej strony miała być dość przystępnym wstępem do historii Rzymu, z drugiej napisana męczącym językiem. Ciekawie napisane fragmenty giną w chaotycznej całości.
I struggled with this book. In the beginning, I could follow along. Eventually, I could not keep track of where I was in time and place. Obviously, still Rome..and long ago, but it got fuzzy. I am sure this is a failing on my part, but just a caution to other folks.
Despite getting lost, I enjoyed how the author brought old stories to life - adding depth to events or people that were barely footnotes in my world history education. I especially enjoyed how the author discusses the potential implications, and not, of the words of published speeches and how they may have related to the actual speeches as given and other events of the time. It would be all to easy to quote out of context if you only see the text..er, translated after hundreds of years of transcribing text...as most of us are like to do.
Probably a book that deserves a few separate reads over years or in time with other history texts for scaffolding. Read if you are interested in Rome.
বইয়ের নামের SPQR অংশটার ল্যাটিন ফুল ফর্ম থেকে ইংরেজি করলে দাঁড়ায় ‘The Senate and People of Rome'. যদিও পপ-হিস্ট্রির বই, আমার মত এলেবেলে পাঠকদের জন্য লেখা, তবুও নাম থেকে বুঝতে পারছেন নিশ্চয়ই যে এটি একটি বিশেষায়িত বই। তো, রোমান সৈন্যদলের প্রশিক্ষণ, রণকৌশল ও কাঠামো, কিংবা রোমানদের পৌর প্রযুক্তির ইতিবৃত্ত, তাদের ধর্ম ও পুরাণ, দাসবিদ্রোহে দাসেদের বীরত্ব ইত্যাদির সামগ্রিক সাধারণ জ্ঞান এখানে পাবেন না পপ-হিস্ট্রি বইয়ে যেমন হয়। এই বইয়ের বিষয়বস্তু প্রাচীন রোমের রাজনীতি, বাকি সবকিছু প্রয়োজনমাফিক স্বল্প পরিসরে বলা হয়েছে।
বইয়ের বিষয়বস্তু, তথ্যের সমৃদ্ধি ইত্যাদি নিয়ে আমি পুরোপুরি খুশি। একটি তারা কমেছে দুটো কারণে। শেষে যে আরো পড়ার বইয়ের লিস্টটা এটা বিষয়বস্তু অনুযায়ী ফুটনোট হিসেবে পেলে ভালো হত। আরেকটা কারণ হচ্ছে কয়েক জায়গায় প্যাসাজ জুড়ে কয়েকবার স্কেপটিজমের কথা বলতে গিয়ে ন্যারেটিভ মার খেয়ে গেছে। অবশ্যই স্কেপটিজম সম্পূর্ণরূপে জাস্টিফাইড। শুধু প্যারার স্ট্রাকচারের জন্য এমন হয়েছে বলেই আমার মনে হয়।
আজকালকার ছোট ছোট রাষ্ট্রযন্ত্রও রোমান সাম্রাজ্যের তুলনায় অনেক কম্প্লিকেটেড। রোমান রাজনীতি এখনো রিলেভেন্ট এই কারণে যে ওলিগার্কি, অ্যারিস্টোক্রেসি, অটোক্রেসির সবযুগেই বেসিক ফর্মটা একই। সেটাকে বেশ নিরাভরণ দেখা যায় রোমান রাজনীতিতে।
First, some mood music.
So this is an excellent tomey history, written in a sardonic “eff the patriarchy” lady's voice, and thus earning some low stars. (And thus also similar to Wendy Doniger's The Hindus: An Alternative History, which also made a bunch of conservative Hindu uncles pissed off, it seems.) But pay those low stars no mind. And pay the slow start of this book no mind: things are slow and kinda dry for the first 33% - 40%, but then there are BIG BIG PAYOFFS once Caesar gets stabbed.
Basically, this is a giant unpacking of all that we know of Rome, and it's a specific challenge to the Great Men-centric narratives we're more familiar with: the ones that divide Rome into a series of chapters starring evil brothers (Romulus and Remus), then kings, then senators, then emperors. Mary Beard tries to see beyond this narrative, into what the daily life was like, what the Roman concept of its own Romanness was, and how they were always busy revising their history (Make Rome Great Again!) as they were living it. As such, this is both history and historiography, with a special focus on Cicero. In fact, this book's subtitle should be “Cicero's Rome” since he's our guiding star for much of the book - well, until he gets murdered in the tumultuous first century BCE. (And, boy, does that feel like a tectonic shift from good ol' days to desaturated evil empire Rome. Also, he's beheaded and a mean lady (in the Emperor's palace? or the Senate? some mean powerful lady) pierces the head's tongue over and over with her hair pins I MEAN WTF LADY) But much of what we know of early, pre-imperial Rome, pre-Senate Rome even, was from the writings of Cicero and other contemporary authors - authors who may have had a stake in portraying it in this way or that.
Anyway, it's all amazing and much too big to be coherent about. So here are some random thoughts:
- Slavery in Rome? So weird. Lots of freed slaves buying houses, getting wealthy. There were enslaved doctors? Losing in a battle was a quick ticket to slavery.
- Germanic tribes kicked a lot of butt, despite what Gladiator would have you believe.
- There was a thing called the “Social War”, which was about other Italian cities hating Rome's expanding influence.
- They filled up the Trastevere neighborhood with water once to stage a giant mock naval battle. I mean, damn, right.
- The neighborhood Testaccio is an artificial mountain made of discarded olive oil pots I AM NOT EVEN JOKING.
- The whole Roman governor thing that we're so familiar with from Pontius Pilate, Ben Hur, all that stuff, was a relatively later thing.
- During the Senate + 2 Consuls years, they would name years after consuls: which would be like calling 2008-2016 “Years of Barack Obama and Joe Biden” and now, well, I dare not say it.
- Speaking of calendars, July is named after Julius Caesar and August after Augustus.
- My faaaave chapter may have been the one about how senators dealt with their diminishing power in the face of increasingly zany emperors (Nero!? Caligula?!). Like, by far fave chapter. We can learn a lot about politics from it!
- The “how the other half lives” chapter was also a heroic attempt at hearing the (silent) voices of the poor, of women, of basically everyone who WASN'T a senator/emperor/historian/philosopher.
- Right-wing “Make Rome Great Again” politicians hated the feminizing, high culture hipsterdom of Greek influence. i.e. There was a perceived cultural division between tough, hardy Romans and urban, hipster Greeks HAAA.
- There was an emperor from North Africa (Septimius Severus) and one from Spain (Russell Crowe? Maximus IS from Spain in that movie).
- And, okay, this isn't from the book, but I just want to say that I always find it funny that Commodus (who WAS as bad as Gladiator portrays - what a jerkface) is Commodo in Italian, which means “taking it easy” as in “basically lazy”.
- THE MYSTERIOUS ETRUSCANS?!
Recommended. Reconnecting with the classics == good values!
Looong book. On the plus side, a lot of it reads like a novel. On the negative side, the organization is often confusing. The author poses a lot of interesting questions but never seems to clearly answer them. She also talks a lot about the people that are normally left out of history - women, slaves, etc, but then doesn't do much to add them here either.
Great book if you are interested in ancient Roman history. It covers a lot of territory so doesn't go in-depth but a great overview of a broad area, including how the poorer Romans lived, a short section on women's lives, etc.
I first became really interested in ancient Roman history on a slow summer weekend two or three years ago. At the time, I had just finished listening to Dan Carlin???s Hardcore History podcast: specifically the episode titled ???Thor???s Angels???, which is about the latter years of the Roman Empire. Driven by curiosity, I downloaded Carlin???s six-part episode series titled ???Death Throes of the Republic???, which focused on the collapse of the Roman Republic.
From that point onwards I developed a latent curiosity about the history of ancient Rome, though I didn???t actively pursue it - there were other things I was interested in, after all. But I did start looking at novels that were set in the same period: novels like Lindsey Davis??? Marcus Didius Falco novels, and Ruth Downie???s Medicus Investigation series. Still, the prospect of sinking into those novels didn???t really encourage me to pick them up, because I wanted to learn more about the time period they were set in before doing so.
However, the prospect was intimidating, simply because there is so much material out there to read. Scholars have been studying and writing about ancient Rome since the ancient Romans themselves were around - the sheer volume is mind-blowing, and is a reason why one can take build an entire academic career solely on the study of ancient Roman history. I could have probably picked up any number of introductory texts to ancient Roman history, but there were simply so many of them that I didn???t know where to start.
In the end, I went about it in a rather roundabout manner (which can sometimes be the best way to go about things). I first picked up Tom Holland???s Dynasty: The Rise and Fall of the House of Caesar, which focused exclusively on the first five Roman emperors. That was when I found out that Mary Beard was publishing her own introduction to the history of ancient Rome, and I knew that that was the book I had to pick up next.
SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome is precisely what it says on the cover: a history of ancient Rome. In her twelve-chapter (plus Prologue and Epilogue) sweep through this historical period, Beard asks: how did Rome become one of the greatest superpowers in world history? And is there still a point to engaging with it in the first place?
To the last question, Beard???s response is a resounding ???yes???. She makes this clear in the Prologue:
Ancient Rome is important. To ignore the Romans is not just to turn a blind eye to the distant past. Rome still helps define the way we understand our world and think about ourselves, from high theory to low comedy. After 2,000 years, it continues to underpin Western culture and politics, what we write and how we see the world, and our place in it.??? Rome has bequeathed to us ideas of liberty and citizenship as much as of imperial exploitation, combined with a vocabulary of modern politics, from ???senators??? to ???dictators???. It has loaned us its catchphrases, from ???fearing Greeks bearing gifts??? to ???bread and circuses??? and ???fiddling while Rome burns??? - even ???where there???s life there???s hope???. And it has prompted laughter, awe and horror in more or less equal measures.??? There is much in the classical world - both Roman and Greek - to engage our interest and demand our attention. Our world would be immeasurably the poorer if we did not continue to interact with theirs.
However, the first question is a bit more complicated. Placing herself as a counterpoint of sorts to Edward Gibbon???s chosen perspective (as elucidated in the magisterial The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire), Beard explains how Rome went from nondescript Italian town to international superpower in the span of a few hundred years - something Beard calls ???one of history???s great puzzles.???
Attempting to solve that puzzle takes up the rest of Beard???s twelve-chapter book, which goes from Rome???s rather muddled mythical beginnings all the way to the reign of Emperor Caracalla, who declared that all freemen within the Roman Empire???s ambit would have Roman citizenship. In between those two points in time, Beard weaves her way through Roman identity (personal and national); politics (local and international); and social life and cultural norms, as she tries to understand what drove Rome to greatness.
The first thing the reader needs to understand about this book is that it is a general overview of a specific period in ancient Roman history, and one that does not focus on historical events. Beard is not interested in reviewing them; she is more interested in trying to see how those events reveal who the ancient Romans were as a people. This is, as it turns out, more complicated than the average reader without any previous experience in reading about ancient Roman history might think - especially since the ancient Romans themselves were confused about who they really were. Consider the myth of Romulus and Remus: a story with great resonance for the ancient Romans because it described the origins of their people. Beard points out that the Romans themselves had very ambivalent feelings about their origins:
Wherever and whenever it originated, Roman writers never stopped telling, retelling and intensely debating the story of Romulus and Remus. ???the foundation story raised even bigger questions, of what it was to be Roman, of what special characteristics defined the Roman people - and, no less pressing, of what flaws and failings they had inherited from their ancestors.
From here, Beard begins uncovering what the Romans thought of themselves, of their past, their present, and even of their future, through the writings left behind by ancient Roman writers like Cicero, Pliny, and others, as well as through the latest archaeological and scholarly studies. Along the way, she highlights connections between the ancient Roman world and our world today, such as when she points draws a connection between the Catiline Conspiracy of 63 BCE and terrorism in the twenty-first century:
The tough response by Cicero - including those summary executions [of the participants in the Catiline Conspiracy] - presented in stark form issues that trouble us even today. Is it legitimate to eliminate ???terrorists??? outside the due processes of law? How far should civil rights be sacrificed in the interests of homeland security? The Romans never ceased to debate ???The Conspiracy of Catiline???, as it came to be known. ??? The events of 63 BCE, and the catchphrases created then, have continued to resonate throughout Western history. Some of the exact words spoken in the tense debates that followed the discovery of the plot still find their place in our own political rhetoric and are still, as we shall see, paraded on the placards and banners, and even in the tweets, of modern political protest.
Holding this whole book together is Beard???s writing. Though she is a Cambridge don and has a well-earned reputation for excellent scholarly work in her field, her prose is very readable: no highfaluting academic terminology here. Whenever she inserts a Latin phrase, Beard is quick to translate it into clear, modern language (with occasional slips into more slangy, casual language, where appropriate). This is a definite plus for readers who want their dose of history without the slog.
There is, however, one problem: the organisation of the book itself. Given the wide range of concepts and ideas Beard is trying to cover, it can get a little confusing sometimes to figure out just what she???s discussing at any given point in time. Though she orders her chapters chronologically, and within those chapters tries to use a key person or event as a central focus for her narrative, there???s still no denying that she has a rather terrible tendency to jump around all over the place in while trying to explain something. This means that the narrative slows down some as the reader tries to catch up with whatever train of thought Beard happens to be on. Fortunately, the confusion is not enough to really be a deal-breaker, so long as the reader is one who is willing to follow along and simply go wherever the narrative chooses to go. Beard gets to wherever it is she needs to go - she just takes the conceptual scenic route to get there.
Overall, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome is, perhaps, one of the most accessible introductions to ancient Roman history currently available. Instead of just detailing history as a series of events, Beard chooses to focus on trying to understand the ancient Romans themselves, and how their culture (as they created it and understood it) has shaped our world today. Beard has an excellent reputation as a scholar, but she does not let academic language slip into this book, which is written in clear, easy-to-read prose with very few confusing terms; any and all Latin phrases are translated in readable English. However, some issues with organisation can make it seem like Beard doesn???t have a clear focus for her narrative, making it difficult to really follow just what sort of point she???s trying to make. Fortunately, this is not a deal-breaking issue, and determined readers should have no problem following along until Beard???s narrative finally arrives where she means it to.
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