The Life and Death of Ancient Cities: A Natural History

Author:   Greg Woolf
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
ISBN:  

9780197621837


Pages:   528
Publication Date:   01 August 2022
Format:   Paperback
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The Life and Death of Ancient Cities: A Natural History


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Author:   Greg Woolf
Publisher:   Oxford University Press
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.60cm , Height: 3.60cm , Length: 23.70cm
Weight:   0.776kg
ISBN:  

9780197621837


ISBN 10:   019762183
Pages:   528
Publication Date:   01 August 2022
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

Selected as a 2020 Book of the Year in The Times Literary Supplement A magisterial survey of ancient cities... The Life and Death of Ancient Cities is a big history that leaves aside some of those big comparative questions, preferring to draw out the contingent and the particular in its vivid portraits. Mr. Woolf makes for an authoritative, readable and thought-provoking guide through a few thousand years of our life as urban animals. -- Kyle Harper, The Wall Street Journal Fascinating and challenging... an impressive sweep of a book. -- Charlotte Higgins, The Guardian An impressive overview of trends in urban histories and will have an impact outside the field of archaeology and ancient history, underlining the centrality of these disciplines to the humanities and social sciences in general, as well as to a wider audience. It is certainly worth the long read to let oneself be carried through urban moments from the Levantine and Mediterranean prehistory into Late Antiquity and beyond. It is a hugely enjoyable read that reminds us that cities and settlements are creations of, and tools for, humans, creating possibilities and unforeseen hindrances in our lives. -- Journal of Roman Studies Greg Woolf reminds us of how vulnerable urban life has often been to plague, invasion and economic collapse. -- The Spectator A general history that manages to escape both the superficiality and the cretinous populism to which the genre is prone... From hydraulic despotism as the driver of urbanism to civilisation-ending vulcanism at Santorini, Woolf dismembers a lot of sacred cows. And, in a surely conscious paradox, he ventures a master hypothesis of his own: an evolutionary approach to urbanism. We are, Woolf contends, urban apes. -- London Review of Books If you have any interest in its subject, you won't regret the investment of time and money. -- John Wilson, The American Conservative This is ever such a good book. Woolf has an enviable knack for getting across complex ideas in a deft and stylish way, without any sacrifice of precision. I do understand the difference between organic and mechanical solidarity (though I can never remember which way round they are), but I have certainly never seen it explained so clearly and economically before.... Whatever one thinks of the evolutionary underpinning of life and death, no one has ever made a more compelling case for seeing cities as part of the natural history of our species. As so often (I'm looking at you, Richard Dawkins), I did sometimes detect an uncomfortable vagueness about whether we are literally talking about evolutionary change, or whether aselection for advantageous traitsa is a metaphor for the social processes that Woolf describes so incomparably well. -- Peter Thonemann, Times Literary Supplement Greg Woolf is a lively and learned guide to ancient cities... Woolf's book contains many brilliant insights and is a major contribution to the history of the Mediterranean. -- David Abulafia, Literary Review This is a fine single-volume study of the ebb and flow of the European civilisations that built cities both large and small. -- Sun News Tucson A deeply researched and ambitious natural history of the origins and growth of urbanism. -- Andrew Robinson, Nature Woolf's The Life and Death of Ancient Cities: A Natural History is an engaging and richly detailed account that effectively tears down misconceptions about the ancient city and replaces them with a more diverse, more believable, and, ultimately, more interesting tale of kaleidoscopic urban experimentation across the ancient Mediterranean world. -- Kathryn Grossman, The Metropole An engaging and comprehensive read... Woolf provides an interesting discussion on how humans are suited to city life, and also offers some thought-provoking considerations on the current rate of globalisation that we're experiencing today... This book should appeal to those who want to discover another perspective on the history of the Mediterranean or, indeed, the ancient world. -- All About History This is an important study which should stand alongside the tours de force of Fernand Braudel and David Abulafia. -- Sir Michael Fallon, Classics for All The Life and Death of Ancient Cities joins a shelf full of enlightening new fun reads on understanding our beginnings in the ancient world. -- Robert S. Davis, New York Journal of Books If you have any interest in its subject, you won't regret the investment of time and money. -- John Wilson, The American Conservative This is a first-class publication that threads its way seamlessly through a complex topic across vast regions and time-spans. It is also accessibly written and highly recommended. -- Mark Merrony, Antiqvvs This worthy book contains multitudes, and as interesting and certainly as instructive as Professor Woolf's studies of urbanization are the not-few cases of deurbanization that he is able to explore, most conspicuously the (possible causes of the) decline or rather transformation of the late Roman antique world. -- Paul Cartledge, The New Criterion We've been waiting for a book like this. It doesn't just review the evidence for cities from Uruk onwards in clear and compelling prose. It also questions whether we have misunderstood the role of the city in human history, presenting an alternative view. A must for all those living in or studying cities. --Chris Gosden, author of Prehistory: A Very Short Introduction This eye-opening book casts a whole new light on humanity's 5,000-year love-hate relationship with the city as Greg Woolf, one of the world's best ancient historians, shows us just how much the forces of evolution have shaped our social behavior. A must-read for everyone interested in the big picture. --Ian Morris, author of War! What Is It Good for? Greg Woolf takes us on a sumptuous, kaleidoscopic journey into the ancient city and well beyond. Urbanism in antiquity could be surprisingly small-scale, unstable and unpredictable, but cities had an outsize impact on politics, empire, and the environment. By tracing their rise and fall as well as the routes between them, Woolf brings rich new perspectives to the history of a Mediterranean much bigger than Greece and Rome. --Josephine Quinn, author of In Search of the Phoenicians Greg Woolf's new book, a lucid and gripping read, is a deep history of ancient cities, from the Sumerians through to the end of the ancient world. Based on a lifetime's work in history and archaeology, Woolf contests the romantic image of the wonders of classical civilization. Cities were usually small, usually part of the workaday world; but, all the same, they were remarkably successful. Woolf shows us how; and he forces us to rethink the way we see the ancient past. Both experts and those who are starting to learn about the ancient world will have to read this book. --Chris Wickham, author of Medieval Europe


Selected as a 2020 Book of the Year in The Times Literary Supplement A magisterial survey of ancient cities... The Life and Death of Ancient Cities is a big history that leaves aside some of those big comparative questions, preferring to draw out the contingent and the particular in its vivid portraits. Mr. Woolf makes for an authoritative, readable and thought-provoking guide through a few thousand years of our life as urban animals. -- Kyle Harper, The Wall Street Journal Fascinating and challenging... an impressive sweep of a book. -- Charlotte Higgins, The Guardian An impressive overview of trends in urban histories and will have an impact outside the field of archaeology and ancient history, underlining the centrality of these disciplines to the humanities and social sciences in general, as well as to a wider audience. It is certainly worth the long read to let oneself be carried through urban moments from the Levantine and Mediterranean prehistory into Late Antiquity and beyond. It is a hugely enjoyable read that reminds us that cities and settlements are creations of, and tools for, humans, creating possibilities and unforeseen hindrances in our lives. -- Journal of Roman Studies Greg Woolf reminds us of how vulnerable urban life has often been to plague, invasion and economic collapse. -- The Spectator A general history that manages to escape both the superficiality and the cretinous populism to which the genre is prone... From hydraulic despotism as the driver of urbanism to civilisation-ending vulcanism at Santorini, Woolf dismembers a lot of sacred cows. And, in a surely conscious paradox, he ventures a master hypothesis of his own: an evolutionary approach to urbanism. We are, Woolf contends, urban apes. -- London Review of Books If you have any interest in its subject, you won't regret the investment of time and money. -- John Wilson, The American Conservative This is ever such a good book. Woolf has an enviable knack for getting across complex ideas in a deft and stylish way, without any sacrifice of precision. I do understand the difference between organic and mechanical solidarity (though I can never remember which way round they are), but I have certainly never seen it explained so clearly and economically before.... Whatever one thinks of the evolutionary underpinning of life and death, no one has ever made a more compelling case for seeing cities as part of the natural history of our species. As so often (I'm looking at you, Richard Dawkins), I did sometimes detect an uncomfortable vagueness about whether we are literally talking about evolutionary change, or whether aselection for advantageous traitsa is a metaphor for the social processes that Woolf describes so incomparably well. -- Peter Thonemann, Times Literary Supplement Greg Woolf is a lively and learned guide to ancient cities... Woolf's book contains many brilliant insights and is a major contribution to the history of the Mediterranean. -- David Abulafia, Literary Review This is a fine single-volume study of the ebb and flow of the European civilisations that built cities both large and small. -- Sun News Tucson A deeply researched and ambitious natural history of the origins and growth of urbanism. -- Andrew Robinson, Nature Woolf's The Life and Death of Ancient Cities: A Natural History is an engaging and richly detailed account that effectively tears down misconceptions about the ancient city and replaces them with a more diverse, more believable, and, ultimately, more interesting tale of kaleidoscopic urban experimentation across the ancient Mediterranean world. -- Kathryn Grossman, The Metropole An engaging and comprehensive read... Woolf provides an interesting discussion on how humans are suited to city life, and also offers some thought-provoking considerations on the current rate of globalisation that we're experiencing today... This book should appeal to those who want to discover another perspective on the history of the Mediterranean or, indeed, the ancient world. -- All About History This is an important study which should stand alongside the tours de force of Fernand Braudel and David Abulafia. -- Sir Michael Fallon, Classics for All The Life and Death of Ancient Cities joins a shelf full of enlightening new fun reads on understanding our beginnings in the ancient world. -- Robert S. Davis, New York Journal of Books If you have any interest in its subject, you won't regret the investment of time and money. -- John Wilson, The American Conservative This is a first-class publication that threads its way seamlessly through a complex topic across vast regions and time-spans. It is also accessibly written and highly recommended. -- Mark Merrony, Antiqvvs This worthy book contains multitudes, and as interesting and certainly as instructive as Professor Woolf's studies of urbanization are the not-few cases of deurbanization that he is able to explore, most conspicuously the (possible causes of the) decline or rather transformation of the late Roman antique world. -- Paul Cartledge, The New Criterion We've been waiting for a book like this. It doesn't just review the evidence for cities from Uruk onwards in clear and compelling prose. It also questions whether we have misunderstood the role of the city in human history, presenting an alternative view. A must for all those living in or studying cities. --Chris Gosden, author of Prehistory: A Very Short Introduction This eye-opening book casts a whole new light on humanity's 5,000-year love-hate relationship with the city as Greg Woolf, one of the world's best ancient historians, shows us just how much the forces of evolution have shaped our social behavior. A must-read for everyone interested in the big picture. --Ian Morris, author of War! What Is It Good for? Greg Woolf takes us on a sumptuous, kaleidoscopic journey into the ancient city and well beyond. Urbanism in antiquity could be surprisingly small-scale, unstable and unpredictable, but cities had an outsize impact on politics, empire, and the environment. By tracing their rise and fall as well as the routes between them, Woolf brings rich new perspectives to the history of a Mediterranean much bigger than Greece and Rome. --Josephine Quinn, author of In Search of the Phoenicians Greg Woolf's new book, a lucid and gripping read, is a deep history of ancient cities, from the Sumerians through to the end of the ancient world. Based on a lifetime's work in history and archaeology, Woolf contests the romantic image of the wonders of classical civilization. Cities were usually small, usually part of the workaday world; but, all the same, they were remarkably successful. Woolf shows us how; and he forces us to rethink the way we see the ancient past. Both experts and those who are starting to learn about the ancient world will have to read this book. --Chris Wickham, author of Medieval Europe


"""The long term case study aspect is what sets Woolf's book apart from conventional discussions in the planning of urban development. As an ancient historian, Woolf masterfully draws on textual and archaeological evidence to consider the widest possible scope of urbanism: cities as they grow and shrink, reorganize, and re-emerge."" -- Michael B. Teitz & Catherine Teitz, Journal of the American Planning Association""Woolf masterfully draws on textual and archaeological evidence to consider the widest possible scope of urbanism: cities as they grow and shrink, reorganize, and re-emerge.... Woolf's study of the ancient Mediterranean offers an unmatched opportunity to explore what happens with evolutionary successes, when new and better systems emerge, and what failure might look like. The issues of urban failure and long-term resilience are perhaps his most important lessons as we look to a future of cities that must respond to environmental, political, and social challenges."" -- Journal of the American Planning Association""Selected as a 2020 Book of the Year in The Times Literary Supplement""""A magisterial survey of ancient cities... ""The Life and Death of Ancient Cities"" is a big history that leaves aside some of those big comparative questions, preferring to draw out the contingent and the particular in its vivid portraits. Mr. Woolf makes for an authoritative, readable and thought-provoking guide through a few thousand years of our life as urban animals."" -- Kyle Harper, The Wall Street Journal""Fascinating and challenging... an impressive sweep of a book."" -- Charlotte Higgins, The Guardian""An impressive overview of trends in urban histories and will have an impact outside the field of archaeology and ancient history, underlining the centrality of these disciplines to the humanities and social sciences in general, as well as to a wider audience. It is certainly worth the long read to let oneself be carried through urban moments from the Levantine and Mediterranean prehistory into Late Antiquity and beyond. It is a hugely enjoyable read that reminds us that cities and settlements are creations of, and tools for, humans, creating possibilities and unforeseen hindrances in our lives."" -- Journal of Roman Studies""Greg Woolf reminds us of how vulnerable urban life has often been to plague, invasion and economic collapse."" -- The Spectator""A general history that manages to escape both the superficiality and the cretinous populism to which the genre is prone... From hydraulic despotism as the driver of urbanism to civilisation-ending vulcanism at Santorini, Woolf dismembers a lot of sacred cows. And, in a surely conscious paradox, he ventures a master hypothesis of his own: an evolutionary approach to urbanism. We are, Woolf contends, urban apes."" -- London Review of Books""If you have any interest in its subject, you won't regret the investment of time and money."" -- John Wilson, The American Conservative""This is ever such a good book. Woolf has an enviable knack for getting across complex ideas in a deft and stylish way, without any sacrifice of precision. I do understand the difference between organic and mechanical solidarity (though I can never remember which way round they are), but I have certainly never seen it explained so clearly and economically before.... Whatever one thinks of the evolutionary underpinning of life and death, no one has ever made a more compelling case for seeing cities as part of the natural history of our species. As so often (I'm looking at you, Richard Dawkins), I did sometimes detect an uncomfortable vagueness about whether we are literally talking about evolutionary change, or whether ÃÂ[selection for advantageous traitsÃÂ[ is a metaphor for the social processes that Woolf describes so incomparably well."" -- Peter Thonemann, Times Literary Supplement""Greg Woolf is a lively and learned guide to ancient cities... Woolf's book contains many brilliant insights and is a major contribution to the history of the Mediterranean."" -- David Abulafia, Literary Review""This is a fine single-volume study of the ebb and flow of the European civilisations that built cities both large and small."" -- Sun News Tucson""A deeply researched and ambitious ""natural history"" of the origins and growth of urbanism."" -- Andrew Robinson, Nature""Woolf's The Life and Death of Ancient Cities: A Natural History is an engaging and richly detailed account that effectively tears down misconceptions about the ancient city and replaces them with a more diverse, more believable, and, ultimately, more interesting tale of kaleidoscopic urban experimentation across the ancient Mediterranean world."" -- Kathryn Grossman, The Metropole""An engaging and comprehensive read... Woolf provides an interesting discussion on how humans are suited to city life, and also offers some thought-provoking considerations on the current rate of globalisation that we're experiencing today... This book should appeal to those who want to discover another perspective on the history of the Mediterranean or, indeed, the ancient world."" -- All About History""This is an important study which should stand alongside the tours de force of Fernand Braudel and David Abulafia."" -- Sir Michael Fallon, Classics for All""The Life and Death of Ancient Cities joins a shelf full of enlightening new fun reads on understanding our beginnings in the ancient world."" -- Robert S. Davis, New York Journal of Books""If you have any interest in its subject, you won't regret the investment of time and money."" -- John Wilson, The American Conservative""This is a first-class publication that threads its way seamlessly through a complex topic across vast regions and time-spans. It is also accessibly written and highly recommended."" -- Mark Merrony, Antiqvvs""This worthy book contains multitudes, and as interesting and certainly as instructive as Professor Woolf's studies of urbanization are the not-few cases of deurbanization that he is able to explore, most conspicuously the (possible causes of the) decline or rather transformation of the late Roman antique world."" -- Paul Cartledge, The New Criterion""We've been waiting for a book like this. It doesn't just review the evidence for cities from Uruk onwards in clear and compelling prose. It also questions whether we have misunderstood the role of the city in human history, presenting an alternative view. A must for all those living in or studying cities."" --Chris Gosden, author of Prehistory: A Very Short Introduction""This eye-opening book casts a whole new light on humanity's 5,000-year love-hate relationship with the city as Greg Woolf, one of the world's best ancient historians, shows us just how much the forces of evolution have shaped our social behavior. A must-read for everyone interested in the big picture."" --Ian Morris, author of War! What Is It Good for?""Greg Woolf takes us on a sumptuous, kaleidoscopic journey into the ancient city and well beyond. Urbanism in antiquity could be surprisingly small-scale, unstable and unpredictable, but cities had an outsize impact on politics, empire, and the environment. By tracing their rise and fall as well as the routes between them, Woolf brings rich new perspectives to the history of a Mediterranean much bigger than Greece and Rome."" --Josephine Quinn, author of In Search of the Phoenicians""Greg Woolf's new book, a lucid and gripping read, is a deep history of ancient cities, from the Sumerians through to the end of the ancient world. Based on a lifetime's work in history and archaeology, Woolf contests the romantic image of the wonders of classical civilization. Cities were usually small, usually part of the workaday world; but, all the same, they were remarkably successful. Woolf shows us how; and he forces us to rethink the way we see the ancient past. Both experts and those who are starting to learn about the ancient world will have to read this book."" --Chris Wickham, author of Medieval Europe"


"""The long term case study aspect is what sets Woolf's book apart from conventional discussions in the planning of urban development. As an ancient historian, Woolf masterfully draws on textual and archaeological evidence to consider the widest possible scope of urbanism: cities as they grow and shrink, reorganize, and re-emerge."" -- Michael B. Teitz & Catherine Teitz, Journal of the American Planning Association ""Woolf masterfully draws on textual and archaeological evidence to consider the widest possible scope of urbanism: cities as they grow and shrink, reorganize, and re-emerge.... Woolf's study of the ancient Mediterranean offers an unmatched opportunity to explore what happens with evolutionary successes, when new and better systems emerge, and what failure might look like. The issues of urban failure and long-term resilience are perhaps his most important lessons as we look to a future of cities that must respond to environmental, political, and social challenges."" -- Journal of the American Planning Association ""Selected as a 2020 Book of the Year in The Times Literary Supplement"" ""A magisterial survey of ancient cities... ""The Life and Death of Ancient Cities"" is a big history that leaves aside some of those big comparative questions, preferring to draw out the contingent and the particular in its vivid portraits. Mr. Woolf makes for an authoritative, readable and thought-provoking guide through a few thousand years of our life as urban animals."" -- Kyle Harper, The Wall Street Journal ""Fascinating and challenging... an impressive sweep of a book."" -- Charlotte Higgins, The Guardian ""An impressive overview of trends in urban histories and will have an impact outside the field of archaeology and ancient history, underlining the centrality of these disciplines to the humanities and social sciences in general, as well as to a wider audience. It is certainly worth the long read to let oneself be carried through urban moments from the Levantine and Mediterranean prehistory into Late Antiquity and beyond. It is a hugely enjoyable read that reminds us that cities and settlements are creations of, and tools for, humans, creating possibilities and unforeseen hindrances in our lives."" -- Journal of Roman Studies ""Greg Woolf reminds us of how vulnerable urban life has often been to plague, invasion and economic collapse."" -- The Spectator ""A general history that manages to escape both the superficiality and the cretinous populism to which the genre is prone... From hydraulic despotism as the driver of urbanism to civilisation-ending vulcanism at Santorini, Woolf dismembers a lot of sacred cows. And, in a surely conscious paradox, he ventures a master hypothesis of his own: an evolutionary approach to urbanism. We are, Woolf contends, urban apes."" -- London Review of Books ""If you have any interest in its subject, you won't regret the investment of time and money."" -- John Wilson, The American Conservative ""This is ever such a good book. Woolf has an enviable knack for getting across complex ideas in a deft and stylish way, without any sacrifice of precision. I do understand the difference between organic and mechanical solidarity (though I can never remember which way round they are), but I have certainly never seen it explained so clearly and economically before.... Whatever one thinks of the evolutionary underpinning of life and death, no one has ever made a more compelling case for seeing cities as part of the natural history of our species. As so often (I'm looking at you, Richard Dawkins), I did sometimes detect an uncomfortable vagueness about whether we are literally talking about evolutionary change, or whether âselection for advantageous traitsâ is a metaphor for the social processes that Woolf describes so incomparably well."" -- Peter Thonemann, Times Literary Supplement ""Greg Woolf is a lively and learned guide to ancient cities... Woolf's book contains many brilliant insights and is a major contribution to the history of the Mediterranean."" -- David Abulafia, Literary Review ""This is a fine single-volume study of the ebb and flow of the European civilisations that built cities both large and small."" -- Sun News Tucson ""A deeply researched and ambitious ""natural history"" of the origins and growth of urbanism."" -- Andrew Robinson, Nature ""Woolf's The Life and Death of Ancient Cities: A Natural History is an engaging and richly detailed account that effectively tears down misconceptions about the ancient city and replaces them with a more diverse, more believable, and, ultimately, more interesting tale of kaleidoscopic urban experimentation across the ancient Mediterranean world."" -- Kathryn Grossman, The Metropole ""An engaging and comprehensive read... Woolf provides an interesting discussion on how humans are suited to city life, and also offers some thought-provoking considerations on the current rate of globalisation that we're experiencing today... This book should appeal to those who want to discover another perspective on the history of the Mediterranean or, indeed, the ancient world."" -- All About History ""This is an important study which should stand alongside the tours de force of Fernand Braudel and David Abulafia."" -- Sir Michael Fallon, Classics for All ""The Life and Death of Ancient Cities joins a shelf full of enlightening new fun reads on understanding our beginnings in the ancient world."" -- Robert S. Davis, New York Journal of Books ""If you have any interest in its subject, you won't regret the investment of time and money."" -- John Wilson, The American Conservative ""This is a first-class publication that threads its way seamlessly through a complex topic across vast regions and time-spans. It is also accessibly written and highly recommended."" -- Mark Merrony, Antiqvvs ""This worthy book contains multitudes, and as interesting and certainly as instructive as Professor Woolf's studies of urbanization are the not-few cases of deurbanization that he is able to explore, most conspicuously the (possible causes of the) decline or rather transformation of the late Roman antique world."" -- Paul Cartledge, The New Criterion ""We've been waiting for a book like this. It doesn't just review the evidence for cities from Uruk onwards in clear and compelling prose. It also questions whether we have misunderstood the role of the city in human history, presenting an alternative view. A must for all those living in or studying cities."" --Chris Gosden, author of Prehistory: A Very Short Introduction ""This eye-opening book casts a whole new light on humanity's 5,000-year love-hate relationship with the city as Greg Woolf, one of the world's best ancient historians, shows us just how much the forces of evolution have shaped our social behavior. A must-read for everyone interested in the big picture."" --Ian Morris, author of War! What Is It Good for? ""Greg Woolf takes us on a sumptuous, kaleidoscopic journey into the ancient city and well beyond. Urbanism in antiquity could be surprisingly small-scale, unstable and unpredictable, but cities had an outsize impact on politics, empire, and the environment. By tracing their rise and fall as well as the routes between them, Woolf brings rich new perspectives to the history of a Mediterranean much bigger than Greece and Rome."" --Josephine Quinn, author of In Search of the Phoenicians ""Greg Woolf's new book, a lucid and gripping read, is a deep history of ancient cities, from the Sumerians through to the end of the ancient world. Based on a lifetime's work in history and archaeology, Woolf contests the romantic image of the wonders of classical civilization. Cities were usually small, usually part of the workaday world; but, all the same, they were remarkably successful. Woolf shows us how; and he forces us to rethink the way we see the ancient past. Both experts and those who are starting to learn about the ancient world will have to read this book."" --Chris Wickham, author of Medieval Europe"


Author Information

Greg Woolf is Ronald J. Mellor Professor of Ancient History at the University of California, Los Angeles and author of Rome: An Empire's Story and Et Tu Brut� The Murder of Caesar and Political Assassination.

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