Killing for the Republic
Citizen-Soldiers and the Roman Way of War
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Narrated by:
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Tom Parks
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By:
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Steele Brand
The year 146 BC marked the brutal end to the Roman Republic's 118-year struggle for the western Mediterranean. Breaching the walls of their great enemy, Carthage, Roman troops slaughtered countless citizens, enslaved those who survived, and leveled the 700-year-old city. That same year in the east, Rome destroyed Corinth and subdued Greece. Over little more than a century, Rome's triumphant armies of citizen-soldiers had shocked the world by conquering all of its neighbors.
How did armies made up of citizen-soldiers manage to pull off such a major triumph? And what made the republic so powerful? In Killing for the Republic, Steele Brand explains how Rome transformed average farmers into ambitious killers capable of conquering the entire Mediterranean. Rome instilled something violent and vicious in its soldiers, making them more effective than other empire builders. Unlike the Assyrians, Persians, and Macedonians, it fought with part-timers. Examining the relationship between the republican spirit and the citizen-soldier, Brand argues that Roman republican values and institutions prepared common men for the rigors and horrors of war.
©2019 Johns Hopkins University Press (P)2019 TantorListeners also enjoyed...
Excellent content and reader
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Great, Unique History
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All in all, a good book, but one I wish I’d read rather than listened to.
Interesting story, vexing format
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Reader has a really strange way of pronouncing names, but there is already a review on that, check it for more info.
Cannot recommend...
I wanted to listen about Rome, don't really care about US history
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boring
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