Rome's Fallen Eagle is divided into 3 sections: Rome, AD 41, Germania Ad 41 and The Invasion of Brittania in Spring AD 43. In these 3 sections, you learn a great deal of Roman history which has been meticulously researched by the author and as a novel has been changed in various places. The omissions and additions shown in the Notes at the end of the book are very interesting for a reader who would like to understand what was happening in Imperial Rome and the machinations as to supremacy which at that time was being planned by three freedmen, who held the Empire to ransom, such was the fear of the ruling family of the time. At this time, Ancient Rome was a marvel of both horror and admiration.
The novel begins with the brutal murder of Caligula which puts the end to his wicked reign and his treatment of all the Roman aristocratic families which changed them into almost fawning creatures afraid for their lives. After his death, Claudius, who is perceived as a foolish and drooling idiot, takes over from Caligula and then Claudius' three freedmen who have planned to make their master only a puppet ruler, begin to wield what they believe is their supreme power over the disabled Emperor. Vespasian, a blunt young aristocrat realises his brother Sabinus is implicated in the Caligula's death, but happily Sabinus is not executed for his part in the assassination as Vespasian is owed two favours by one of the freedmen. Then the two young men are ordered to go to Germania to bring back the lost Eagle of the Seventeenth Legion which is almost as bad as signing their own death warrants. It is in Germania that Vespasian learns more of his trade, fighting the Checchi in their sacred groves and later, in a great naval battle where his finding of the Eagle is thwarted by another Roman officer, Gabinius, who steals the Eagle and returns it to Claudius as if he was the one who found it. Afterwards Vespasian is despatched as legate to the Second Augusta, with General Aulius Plautius in charge, to bring Britannia under Roman rule. The brutalities that happen during this war are hard to read and the first and last battle of that invasion are written in so much detail that it matches the days the killing continued when thousands of savage Britons are slain, with many casualties also on the Roman side. It is very interesting to find out how the Romans fought and owing to such a disciplined army were able to overcome, even if they had a lot less men. Any Roman soldiers who grumbled about the system were put to death immediately, which was a cruel but successful way to remind a soldier discipline is everything and warning each man that he must act on any orders, bad or good, and fight until the last man standing.
Against the backdrop of this war, the political intrigue in Rome continues and Vespasian in particular is always trying to find a way out of the freedmen's web that could result in his death when he arrives back in Rome. In this novel most characters know their role and are determined to surface triumphant both in battle or in agreement with those who plot against them politically.
It is only towards the end of the novel, Vespasian begins to understand a great deal more about politics that have affected him and how to look after himself on the battlefield. He has been a popular leader of the Roman soldiery and honourable in their eyes. He is now a man who has made mistakes, learned from them, yet he has survived. But his wife and children have been taken to live in the palace to be brought up with Claudius' son and his mother, the evil Messalina and her brother, Vespasian's enemy. His thoughts begin to turn on higher things and he begins to ask himself the question as to why one imperial family alone should rule the whole of the known world. A thought comes briefly that he himself might one day do a lot better for himself and his stricken family: to stand a chance to make and wield the supreme power himself. A 5* book but only read it, if you love battles.