Hide this

Results from Google Books

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.

The Roman Revolution by Ronald Syme
Loading...

The Roman Revolution

by Ronald Syme

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
270720,579 (4.16)8

All member reviews

Showing 7 of 7
I imagine this treatise on the fall of the Roman Republic is priceless to historians, but it makes for a terrible introduction for the layman --I had to check other sources constantly, as Syme assumes some familiarity with the events he describes and brushes over some critical points.

Syme advances the theory that political movements require the formation of strong factions to be successful, and he convincingly describes the factions that held the Caesarian and Augustan regimes together. The last third of his book aims for completeness of description, and as a result loses strength and cohesion. ( )
  jorgearanda | Dec 21, 2009 |
The Roman Revolution by Ronald Syme (2002)
  leese | Nov 23, 2009 |
The Roman Revolution is a profund and unconventional treatment of a great theme. the fall of the republic and the decline of freedom in Rome.
  HanoarHatzioni | Jun 10, 2009 |
This original master work by a craftsman of Roman history is superb. The primary lesson of the Roman Revolution for us is the classic warning of a powerful leader who came to power in the midst during a time of chaos or disruption. Syme relates the final years of the ancient Roman Republic and the creation of the Roman Empire by Caesar Augustus. A momentous warning, in 1939, it was immediately controversial although timely in light of World War II. Its thesis is that the structure of the Republic and its Senate were inadequate to the needs of Roman rule, and that Augustus was merely doing what was necessary to restore order in public life. This was a situation not unlike the contemporary events in Nazi Germany and the other fascist regimes.

Syme relies on prosopography, as described by Friedrich Münzer, to demonstrate Augustus' covert but undisputed power. His manipulation of the Roman client system and the development of personal relationships into a "Caesarian" faction then eliminated the competition. The inexorable process culminated in the exploitation of his relationship as a relative of Julius Caesar to pursue Caesar's assassins, then over a period of years to gradually incorporate his personal power and prestige while all the while nominally restoring the Republic in name only. Augustus then appears as a crafty politician in Rome's constitutional crisis.

His conclusion of inevitability is less strongly supported than his elucidation of the usurpation process and the major challenge to his view appears in The Last Generation of the Roman Republic, where Erich Gruen argued that the traditional view of the Republic's decay is not actually supported by the objective evidence.
2 vote gmicksmith | Jan 4, 2009 |
Dense, but unbelievably well informed. ( )
  RoaldEuller | Mar 26, 2008 |
4138 The Roman Revolution, by Ronald Syme (read 7 Mar 2006) This book, published in 1939, is a classic account of Rome from about 60 B.C. to 14 A.D. The book has many footnotes, but they are mostly in Latin, and some of the book is of limited interest and I found I was happy to get to the last page. The author disagrees with the claim, made in William Haynes Lytle's famed poem beginning "I am dying, Egypt, dying" that Mark Antony, drunk with Cleopatra's caresses, "madly threw the world away." Most of the book deals with events after Ceasar's death, and the book spends many chapters on Augustus and how he gradually killed off the Roman Republic, so that when he died in 14 A.D. the Empire had replaced the Republic. ( )
  Schmerguls | Oct 21, 2007 |
Sir Ronald Syme's analysis of the rise of Octavian/Augustus is comprehensive and breathtaking (though, I've since discovered, lacking in certain small ways: for instance, Syme never names the Arval Brotherhood as one of the priesthoods that Augustus revived as part of his efforts to "purify" the Roman people); Syme examines the Augustan Revolution through the lens of contemporary events in Europe (remember, the original date of publication was 1939), and it is this vantage point, left largely unremarked but lurking always in the background, that gives the book its urgency and, I suspect, its controversy. Syme relies almost exclusively on ancient sources; his statement of purpose in his introductory chapter ("The present inquiry will attempt to discover the resources and devices by which a revolutionary leader arose in civil strife, usurped power for himself and his faction, transformed a faction into a national party, and a torn and distracted land into a nation, with a stable and enduring government" [p. 4]) doubtless caused many of Roman Revolution's original readers many a disquieting moment: could Germany's self-proclaimed "Thousand Year Reich" really be a'borning? And what about the Soviet Union..? If I had to sum up this book in 15 words or less, I'd say "Faction is everything:" while Syme doesn't promote the fuzzy and paranoid thinking that goes by the label of "conspiracy theory," conspiracies were rife in those days, and what you did often counted for far less than who you knew. Rom. Rev. has changed the way that I look at politics in general; for that alone, it is well worth the time and effort I spent reading it. ( )
2 vote uvula_fr_b4 | May 29, 2006 |
Showing 7 of 7

Quick Links

Ebooks Audio Swap
1 free0/12

Popular covers

 

Help/FAQs | About | Privacy/Terms | Blog | Contact | LibraryThing.com | APIs | WikiThing | Common Knowledge | 47,028,176 books!