The Making of the Roman Army explores how a small citizen militia guarding a village on the banks of the Tiber evolved into the professional Roman army. Lawrence Keppie pays particular attention to the transitional period between Republic and Empire - the time of Julius Caesar, Mark Antony, and Augustus. Keppie overcomes the traditional dichotomy between a historical view of the Republic and an archaeological approach to the Empire by making the most of the often overlooked archaeological evidence from the earlier years.
Lawrence John Forbes Keppie is a Scottish historian and archaeologist. He attended Coatbridge High School and then studied classics at Glasgow University where he came under the influence of A.R. Burn, who first introduced him to epigraphy. After graduation he transferred to Balliol College, Oxford, where he studied Roman history and archaeology.
Professor Keppie started his digging career as a schoolboy on a medieval castle site in Cumbernauld, before moving on to participate in the Scottish Field School of Archaeology excavations at Birrens Roman fort under the directorship of Anne Robertson. The first excavation he directed himself was on a section of the Antonine Wall at Carleith in 1969.
Dr. Keppie was elected a Fellow of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland in 1971, of the Society of Antiquaries of London in 1978 and of the Royal Society of Edinburgh in 1995. He served as the Honorary Secretary of the Glasgow Archaeological Society, Vice President and then the 45th President of the Society from 1988 to 1991. He also served as a curator at the Hunterian Museum, Glasgow University.
Dr. Keppie's academic career throughout has been focused on Roman Scotland, Roman Italy and the Roman army. He is now retired.
I found this book to be a nice companion piece to Graham Webster's The Roman Imperial Army. While Webster took the forensic approach to the Roman Army and focused on the physical structure ( armor, weapons, organization, forts, etc. ) Dr. Keppie looks at the evolution of the army, from the days of the Republic to the early Empire and the role the army played in this transition, both positive and negative. When read in conjuncture with Dr. Webster the book fits in nicely. There are photographs, drawings, and layouts of roman camps over diagrams of the archeological excavations of the actual forts and camps. This a very easy/pleasurable read and would make a nice addition to one's personal library.
I read this for a class but soon found myself reading it out of my own free will! As someone who is not a historian, history student, or particularly interested in Roman history, it provided an interesting and nicely detailed analysis of the development of the Roman army and society alongside it, and many great figures - and, as a neat bonus, helped inform a lot of my knowledge of historical references to the Romans! It can admittedly drag a bit if you’re not a history buff, but the well-roundedness of the historical, political, and military details kept me coming back.
Keppie does an excellent job of giving us a general, but sufficiently detailed overview of the Roman army from its early Republican days as mere hoplites, until the Early Imperial Army 600 years later. The book does well in highlighting key themes and individuals that shaped the army in various stages, as well as depicting several pivotal battles in the Republic's history from the Heraclea to Actium. Its appendix even has a complete list of the legions!
A clear, concise, and thorough explanation of the Roman army- from its humble beginnings, through the height of its glory, and finally the decline into decrepitude.
Only got about quarter way through and failed to keep my interest. Gave it 3 stars as it was well enough written, but just not to my taste. But early chapters on very early history were good.