Oh lordy - where to start? Way too out of date (1959), way too scholarly, they expect you to be very familiar with their myriad other titles, and expect that you already read Latin. If you don't, they do not translate. It speaks very little about daily life, but covers much of Roman warfare and way too much about the early church. It speaks with disdain of the "Barbarian" peoples like Goths, Vikings, Saxons, Angles, and Britons, and thinks only Romans and Christians were good people. Much of the material has been updated, and Ferguson's The Vikings is both a better book, better written, and covers much of the same material more in depth. Its only saving grace is that it is short, and the shortness is even shorter because of @ 30 pages of drawings. Unless you're a PhD in Early British History, do yourself a favor and skip this.