When regarding ancient
history it is common for Westerners to admire the Greeks but identify with the
Romans. For all their cultural achievements (or perhaps because of them), the classic
Hellenes strike us as truly ancient. Not so Rome, which by contrast is eerily
familiar. Despite the passage of two millennia, Rome at the time of Augustus somehow
seems hardly more alien than the 19th century of our own country. To
be sure, there are elements of Roman life that are strange or that shock us, including
gladiatorial games and casual brutality, but then again aspects of 19th
century American life shock us too.
Despite the vast
amount of Greek and Latin literature that has been lost – most simply having
rotted away uncopied in the Middle Ages – quite a lot survives: history, epic
poetry, fiction, epigrams, drama, rhetoric, and more. The plays of Plautus and
Terence read like modern sitcoms (in fact, their plots have been stolen
repeatedly for modern sitcoms), Suetonius is as gossipy as TMZ, and Cicero is as
bombastic as any US Senator. Anyone interested in Roman history is well advised
to visit the basic original sources: Livy, Polybius, Plutarch, Tacitus, and
others. (All these authors once were standard fare in secondary school, but no
longer.) However, for the modern reader, who more often than not has only a
passing acquaintance with Classical civilization, a standard history textbook
is a useful accompaniment if only to keep the original sources in proper
context. There are plenty of texts from which to choose, and new ones are
published regularly. Some are little more than simple chronologies while others
are thematic, the most ambitious of the latter still being Edward Gibbon’s 18th
century six-volume The Decline and Fall
of the Roman Empire. Much more concise, but still tending to the thematic, is
a new (2015) treatment by Mary Beard, classics professor at Cambridge: SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome.
Why do we need
another one? As Beard explains in her prologue: “It is a dangerous myth that we
are better historians than our predecessors. We are not. But we come to Roman
history with different priorities – from gender identity to food supply – that make
the ancient past speak to us in a new idiom.” Mary Beard’s book is a solid and
readable addition to the literature, and one with 21st century
priorities. I would not recommend the book to those whose only exposure to the
classics are the movies Gladiator and
Spartacus. Beard writes for a reader who
has at least some prior sense of the general outline of the history of Rome,
and when she mentions an author such as Plautus, Juvenal, or Pliny the Elder
she assumes the reader has some idea who the person is. For readers with at
least this much background, however, she offers an interesting perspective in
engaging prose.
Beard’s
arrangement of the material is not strictly chronological. She starts in medias res with the conspiracy of Catiline
(63 BC), relating it to the modern style of politics, and then backtracks to
Rome’s earliest years. Her theme is that there was nothing inevitable about the
rise of the city and the Empire. Much of Rome’s success was a throw of the dice
that easily could have come up snake eyes. To the extent the Romans made their
own luck, however, it was by being adaptable to changing circumstances. The odd
Roman mixture of ruthlessness and inclusiveness (slaughter your enemies but
give the survivors citizenship) was particularly effective. For all the
complexity of the late Roman Republic’s unwritten constitution, the Romans
weren’t much interested in political theory other than a nod to libertas – sometimes little more than a
nod. They distrusted a concentration of power but weren’t committed to
democracy or aristocracy or to some particular mix; they altered their government
to suit the needs of Empire. If in the end a concentration of power happened anyway,
that too is relatable in the 21st century.
The Romans still
matter. They are old family who largely inform who we still are. Thanksgiving
weekend is an especially apt time to encounter old family. It’s also a time for
a very Roman bout of over-eating though I trust most tables are a little less
extravagant than Trimalchio’s
The crude nouveau riche braggart
Trimalchio hosts dinner in Satyricon,
Fellini’s adaptation of Petronius’ 1st century novel