Use this fascinating reference resource to find out what it meant to be a typical Ancient Roman. Using plenty of anecdotal material written by Romans themselves, this volume explores the ins and outs of daily living for ordinary people, from their homes, to the foods they ate, to the sports and games they enjoyed. The ancient civilization is brought to life, and students can easily make comparisons between the people of that culture and the people of our own, discovering the similarities and differences between the two.
Many different aspects of life in Ancient Rome are presented to provide a full and varied picture. Discover what the education system was like and what the critics had to say about it. Find out who the most successful gladiators and charioteers were, the equivalent of our modern-day sports superstars. Examine what life was like for slaves. These details and more help to provide an understanding of this ancient society that at first glance may seem very foreign but that upon closer study seems to have much in common with modern day society.
It's not so much that I didn't like the book. I just didnt find it very easy to read. It consists mostly of short anecdotes that aren't arranged particularly well. I didn't like the formatting, and the editing wasn't very good. It would probably be OK as a reference book in somebody's library that needed handy anecdotes on Rome, if such people exist.
I love reading about Ancient Rome, and I wanted to like this more, but the haphazard organization made it a little annoying to get through. Having the headers for new sections to the side of the paragraphs rather than above was frequently confusing, as the topic seemed to jump disjointedly without a sense break. And to be completely honest I'm not sure how much that would have helped in many cases, since the flow of information was often only loosely connected by an overarching idea, like architecture, without transition sentences, headers, space breaks, or really any purpose for leaving the previous idea in the place it was. I wondered if the author's inspiration to write this book was just to combine several factoids about Ancient Romans in one place, just lining them up one after the other. While I was interested in reading about their lives and work and leisure, I would have liked it more if there was a more obvious internal logic to its organization. I even noticed that he wrote nearly the same description of the Lupercalian Festival and Mark Antony's infamous crowning of Caesar during one in two separate chapters. I don't feel confident in how to rate this book because the information was great, but the structure and editing left much to be desired.
Antik roma hakkında ilgisi olanlar için çok iyi bir kitap ama kesinlikle başlangıç kitabı değil. Çok fazla değişik zaman olay ve kişi hakkında konuştuğu için hiç roma tarihi bilmeyenler için zor olabilir.
Ama daha önce bir kitap bile okuduysanız roma tarihi hakkında o zaman sunduğu geniş bilgi yelpazesi okuyan için çok eğlenceli oluyor
A good read for fans of Roman history who want a peek at daily life instead of political topics. Chapters are divided by topic, and all of the evidence/insight is anecdotal.