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View Full Version : A Solid History of the Roman Empire from the Principate onwards?



The Flying Cow
01-19-2009, 07:33 PM
From the beginning of the Principate, aka after Augustus (Octavian) to the Dominate, and to the end.

I'm looking for such a work. The Oxford History of Rome is shite, disjointed and mishmashed, and the Cambridge dish offers little more. I saw a good Blackwell treatment of the later Roman Empire, but it doesn't cover anything earlier than AD 284, which is well into the Empire proper. I refer to this volume: http://www.amazon.com/History-Later-Roman-Empire-284-641/dp/1405108568/ref=wl_it_dp?ie=UTF8&coliid=I3VQ40OL89DPY2&colid=3QGTPDT9YLOD7 which apparently treats both Eastern and Western Empires, something impressive in its own right no doubt, but seeing as all I've read on the Romans reaches but the end of the Republic (c. 44 BC) it leaves a considerable gap (44 BC to AD 284) which needs coverage.

Price range: 15-20-35 dollars maximum of the maximums.

The Flying Cow
03-28-2009, 07:21 PM
Found one. Michael Grant's "The History of Rome" seems like a solid tome (at least so they say) tackling the totality of the Roman world in 440 or so pages.

If anyone is interested there is also the older "Roman Realities" by Professor Hooper.