Great Jones - Shop now
Buy new:
$28.00
FREE delivery Tuesday, April 15 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35
Ships from: Amazon.com
Sold by: Amazon.com
$28.00
Get Fast, Free Shipping with Amazon Prime FREE Returns
FREE delivery Tuesday, April 15 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35
Or Prime members get FREE delivery Friday, April 11. Order within 15 hrs 1 min.
In Stock
$$28.00 () Includes selected options. Includes initial monthly payment and selected options. Details
Price
Subtotal
$$28.00
Subtotal
Initial payment breakdown
Shipping cost, delivery date, and order total (including tax) shown at checkout.
Ships from
Amazon.com
Amazon.com
Ships from
Amazon.com
Sold by
Amazon.com
Amazon.com
Sold by
Amazon.com
Returns
30-day refund/replacement
30-day refund/replacement
This item can be returned in its original condition for a full refund or replacement within 30 days of receipt.
Payment
Secure transaction
Your transaction is secure
We work hard to protect your security and privacy. Our payment security system encrypts your information during transmission. We don’t share your credit card details with third-party sellers, and we don’t sell your information to others. Learn more
$19.62
Get Fast, Free Shipping with Amazon Prime FREE Returns
Book in very good condition. Pages are crisp and clean with no markings. Cover is in very good condition. Binding is tight. Ships direct from Amazon! Book in very good condition. Pages are crisp and clean with no markings. Cover is in very good condition. Binding is tight. Ships direct from Amazon! See less
FREE delivery Tuesday, April 15 on orders shipped by Amazon over $35
Or Prime members get FREE delivery Saturday, April 12. Order within 22 hrs 16 mins.
Only 1 left in stock - order soon.
$$28.00 () Includes selected options. Includes initial monthly payment and selected options. Details
Price
Subtotal
$$28.00
Subtotal
Initial payment breakdown
Shipping cost, delivery date, and order total (including tax) shown at checkout.
Access codes and supplements are not guaranteed with used items.
Kindle app logo image

Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.

Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.

Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.

QR code to download the Kindle App

Follow the author

Something went wrong. Please try your request again later.

The Roman Triumph Paperback – May 31, 2009

4.5 out of 5 stars 82 ratings

{"desktop_buybox_group_1":[{"displayPrice":"$28.00","priceAmount":28.00,"currencySymbol":"$","integerValue":"28","decimalSeparator":".","fractionalValue":"00","symbolPosition":"left","hasSpace":false,"showFractionalPartIfEmpty":true,"offerListingId":"L7cM4WRNuWqqSuElIZ2TgAZaSMX%2F7HOn3uM1dJRI4Z9rkckSfITue6x7NbBOx6ACoSURlAJVOIlTUIXNC4ID8DyTx0DRIY1IoFlkUfy5BJwubqK3XvawRCVbT7PvaSYRJxWWR2BnuVc%3D","locale":"en-US","buyingOptionType":"NEW","aapiBuyingOptionIndex":0}, {"displayPrice":"$19.62","priceAmount":19.62,"currencySymbol":"$","integerValue":"19","decimalSeparator":".","fractionalValue":"62","symbolPosition":"left","hasSpace":false,"showFractionalPartIfEmpty":true,"offerListingId":"L7cM4WRNuWqqSuElIZ2TgAZaSMX%2F7HOnFhQE%2BLADaXc8PuU3BcbC0PiMXCdFeqrwvNpR0f9T3%2FgeGNY9okI7hdbR9N%2BhnyvxhUycNl2vkNtqsmbnxKMggerlTKqxuyZTs%2FqtmSht3aFPF5dfT8ZTu%2FwEw3d1qimUfs1DXa%2B4Z734WEkiFe33F1uUW%2FYt6hxl","locale":"en-US","buyingOptionType":"USED","aapiBuyingOptionIndex":1}]}

Purchase options and add-ons

It followed every major military victory in ancient Rome: the successful general drove through the streets to the temple of Jupiter on the Capitoline Hill; behind him streamed his raucous soldiers; in front were his most glamorous prisoners, as well as the booty he’d captured, from enemy ships and precious statues to plants and animals from the conquered territory. Occasionally there was so much on display that the show lasted two or three days.

A radical reexamination of this most extraordinary of ancient ceremonies, this book explores the magnificence of the Roman triumph, but also its darker side. What did it mean when the axle broke under Julius Caesar’s chariot? Or when Pompey’s elephants got stuck trying to squeeze through an arch? Or when exotic or pathetic prisoners stole the general’s show? And what are the implications of the Roman triumph, as a celebration of imperialism and military might, for questions about military power and “victory” in our own day? The triumph, Mary Beard contends, prompted the Romans to question as well as celebrate military glory.

Her richly illustrated work is a testament to the profound importance of the triumph in Roman culture―and for monarchs, dynasts and generals ever since. But how can we re-create the ceremony as it was celebrated in Rome? How can we piece together its elusive traces in art and literature? Beard addresses these questions, opening a window on the intriguing process of sifting through and making sense of what constitutes “history.”

The%20Amazon%20Book%20Review
The Amazon Book Review
Book recommendations, author interviews, editors' picks, and more. Read it now.

Frequently bought together

This item: The Roman Triumph
$28.00
Get it as soon as Tuesday, Apr 15
In Stock
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
+
$14.70
Get it as soon as Tuesday, Apr 15
In Stock
Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
Total price: $00
To see our price, add these items to your cart.
Details
Added to Cart
These items are shipped from and sold by different sellers.
Choose items to buy together.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“Conjectures and conclusions grow from and around the triumphus like kudzu. It takes the mighty vorpal sword of Mary Beard to clear a path through this jabberwocky jungle, snicker-snack. She stands in the great tradition of myth-puncturing Latin classicists--scholars like Richard Bentley, Basil Gildersleeve. A. E. Housman. or Ronald Syme--when she points out that almost all the established views on the triumph are dubious or plain wrong...Her prose, for all its learning, is jaunty. Her book is, in short, a triumph.”Garry Wills, New York Review of Books

“[This] book succeeds as a case study in ancient history, but also as an implicit invitation to reconsider representations of victory and loss in our own culture. Beard ranges among literary, historiographical, artistic, architectural, numismatic, epigraphical, and archaeological sources with impressive ease and fluency, showing that the preoccupation with triumph haunts all these different fields of Roman cultural life--from Ovid's cheeky claim that triumphal processions can be good for picking up girls, and his presentation of himself as the victim of Cupid's triumphal chariot, to the many triumphal arches that the triumphalist Romans erected, which Beard reads as attempts to construct a permanent memorial from an essentially fleeting parade...Beard brilliantly shows that most of this story about the typical Roman triumph is a scholarly or literary fabrication, supported by very slender evidence, or by none at all; or it is a reconstruction based on evidence from authors in widely different time periods, each of whom has his own axe to grind...The demolition work is the most obvious accomplishment of her book.”
Emily Wilson, New Republic

“This is no ordinary history. It is not a reconstruction but a deconstruction, a virtuoso display of how to interrogate one's sources. Not only that, it is written with sly subtlety, delightful humor and an agreeable absence of jargon.”
Christian Tyler, Financial Times

“A book that manages to be simultaneously both brilliantly subtle and splendidly swaggering. Throughout it, [Beard] subjects our sources for the Roman triumph to merciless dissection, exposing with a pathologist's scalpel how beneath all its outward sheen there lurked profound insecurities and ambivalences...[It] can be enjoyed by readers far beyond the purlieus of classics departments...A book that is, in every sense of that complex word, a triumph.”
Tom Holland, Sunday Times

“This rich and provocative book offers such a full account of what it means to call ancient Rome "a triumphal culture."”
William Fitzgerald, Times Literary Supplement

“From the first (uncertain) moment when Romans came to think of triumph as a bundle of victory rites that could be repeatedly improved upon, generals fought and lobbied for their moment in the limelight. Enemies, rivals and spectators could not resist being drawn into the show. Beard's
Roman Triumph will exercise a similar fascination on its readers.”Greg Woolf, The Guardian

“In
The Roman Triumph, many cherished assumptions are robustly interrogated or put to the sword...Beard takes us on a dizzying trip back and forth across triumphs and centuries (Pompey, Romulus, Nero, Augustus). Only after she has unpicked accounts of Pompey's triumph, and reflected on captives, spoils, rules and ritual, does she pause briefly to end at origins...Simultaneously a re-evaluation of the triumph, of Roman culture more broadly, and of the problems of scholarship on ancient societies, this is an ambitious project.”Maria Wyke, The Independent

“Thorough, minutely detailed and closely argued...[Beard's] account certainly brings us closer to the complex and fascinating reality than any Rome according to MGM or Paramount.”
Christopher Hart, Independent on Sunday

“This book gives a bracing lesson in the use and abuse of evidence, as Beard teases apart the various bits and pieces that have gone to make up the conglomerate picture of the timeless essence of the triumph. In the process, she unpicks many of our basic assumptions about those quintessentially Roman characteristics we normally see embodied in it. The triumph and its reception here become fractals of Roman culture--and of the way Roman culture is studied...Illuminating perspectives [are] offered throughout the book...This learned and spirited book could have been no more than an exercise is debunking and dismantling. Beard enjoys debunking and dismantling, and does it with panache, but her unpicking of the evidence and her demolition of the consensus is not meant to create an epistemological no-man's-land; she wants to highlight the rewarding difficulty of the project of history, not its impossibility. There are things to be known about the past, and there are things to be known about how we come to know them. Beard stages her own show, demonstrating by practice, and in the process has given us a piece of scholarship that has lessons to teach anyone engaged in the study of the past.”
Denis Feeney, London Review of Books

“[Beard] is immensely knowledgeable, and lays forth one of the paradoxes of history (and not only ancient history, one may add). This is that the more we know, the less certain we can be of anything...This is a fascinating book which offers another paradox. By showing how much that we thought we knew is uncertain, Mary Beard teaches us far more than any confident account of the triumphal ceremony ever could.”
Allan Massie, Literary Review

“So you thought you knew about the Roman Triumph? Conventional wisdom states that triumphant generals in Rome painted their faces red. They rode in a chariot with a slave who whispered to them: "Remember that you are a man." For that one day, they impersonated the king of the gods, Jupiter Best and Greatest, wearing his costume, consisting of a purple toga and a tunic decorated with a palm-leaf pattern, a laurel wreath and other accessories...If you thought you knew some or all of these facts, Mary Beard's excellent book will prove you wrong...It makes healthily astringent (as well as fascinating) reading...The book can be heartily recommended.”
Jonathan Powell, Times Higher Education Supplement

“At every turn Beard happily strips away misconceptions and hypotheses, emphasizing the fragility of the facts...It's hard to imagine a more perceptive and questioning study of a central cultural practice that lasted into the Christian era, and was constantly being subverted, extended, and absorbed into representations of empire and even of divinity.”
Helen Meany, Irish Times

“[Beard] strips layer after layer after layer away and the mystery and the excitement of the book is wondering what will be left at the end…She is almost the Miss Marple of Roman history because she sees to the heart of a mystery and how it works…She is not dumbing down but she is making accessible what is incredibly interesting.”
Tom Holland, Five Books

“How much do we really know about Rome's supreme honor, and how much is myth and invention? Not much and quite a lot, it turns out. Beard's brilliant analysis locates the ritual in the shifting political, social and martial worlds of Rome. Illuminating moments abound.”
Marc Lambert, Scotland on Sunday

“Brilliant, original and challenging, this book is a triumph in itself.”
The Scotsman

“[An] arresting and highly readable new book...A highly amusing as well as illuminating read...Overall, Beard is giving us a lesson in how to understand and study ritual. Its early students (not least Frazer, one of the founders of modern anthropology, in
The Golden Bough), saw it as a strait-jacket, constraining behavior within tightly defined parameters. This book gives us the Roman triumph as a case study in the lessons of more recent anthropology. Parameters are broad: malleable enough for ritual to be used to attempt to justify behavior, and not just to dictate it...Instead of unchanging ritual, Beard gives us a world of invented precedent and "convenient amnesia," of substantial success but also manifold failure as individual Roman generals attempted to mold general practice to their own--usually political--purposes.”Peter Heather, BBC History Magazine

“Beard’s approach to the triumph is “uncomfortably subversive”, as she labels a quip of Seneca at the start of her study...Beard shows us throughout her study that, as the old cliché aptly puts it, the triumph is still good to think with and also “good to think about.” Her book is as much about doing ancient history as reconstructing the history of an ancient ceremony, and perhaps more about writing and the writing of an account of The Roman Triumph than actually writing the account itself..I found this an eminently readable and hugely entertaining book in which Beard enthusiastically conveys her commitment to reviewing the evidence for the triumph.”
Robert Tatam, Journal of Classics Teaching

“Beautifully written, brilliantly insightful, this book is highly recommended to all those Romanists, professional and amateur, excavators and tourists, who want to get under the skin of the empire-builders of ancient Rome.”
Neil Faulkner, Current Archaeology

“In this highly individual book Mary Beard plays havoc with conventional ideas about the Roman triumph, while at the same time scrupulously presenting the evidence with which we can make up our own minds. It is the most important statement to date by a major historian of Roman culture.”
William V. Harris, Shepherd Professor of History, Columbia University

“Occasionally one comes across a work of history which lights up a whole era as if by a lightning flash. Mary Beard's new book falls into this rare category. By focusing on the specific ritual of the triumph, she brilliantly illuminates the Roman world in all its aspects―military and political, social and literary, religious and geographical―and also reminds us how much of our own language and culture of success is drawn from this gaudy and often bloody spectacle.”
Robert Harris, author of Imperium

About the Author

Mary Beard has a Chair of Classics at Cambridge and is a Fellow of Newnham College. She is classics editor of The Times Literary Supplement and author of the blog “A Don’s Life.” She is also a winner of the 2008 Wolfson History Prize.

Product details

  • ASIN ‏ : ‎ 0674032187
  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Belknap Press: An Imprint of Harvard University Press (May 31, 2009)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 448 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 9780674032187
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0674032187
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.38 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 6 x 1.5 x 9.25 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.5 out of 5 stars 82 ratings

About the author

Follow authors to get new release updates, plus improved recommendations.
Mary Beard
Brief content visible, double tap to read full content.
Full content visible, double tap to read brief content.

Discover more of the author’s books, see similar authors, read book recommendations and more.

Customer reviews

4.5 out of 5 stars
82 global ratings

Review this product

Share your thoughts with other customers

Customers say

Customers find the book interesting, with one describing it as a scholarly work about ancient Rome. They also find it enjoyable to read.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

Select to learn more

4 customers mention "Interest"4 positive0 negative

Customers find the book interesting, with one describing it as monumentally engaging and another noting its scholarly approach.

"Mary Beard writes interesting books about ancient Rome that are easy to follow" Read more

"...I like that immensely. A monumentally interesting and appealing read." Read more

"Lots of interesting info on the Roman triumph, but unfortunately the author gets in the way of her own topic...." Read more

"This must be the definitive study of the Roman triumphs. Scholarly, and yet engrossing an entertaining." Read more

3 customers mention "Enjoyment"3 positive0 negative

Customers find the book enjoyable to read.

"...enough knowledge to commit this work to paper in a coherent and enjoyable manner...." Read more

"...I like that immensely. A monumentally interesting and appealing read." Read more

"...Scholarly, and yet engrossing an entertaining." Read more

damaged
1 out of 5 stars
damaged
The package arrived mostly opened and some of the pages on the book were bent. Also the jacket has stickers on that cannot be removed
Thank you for your feedback
Sorry, there was an error
Sorry we couldn't load the review

Top reviews from the United States

  • Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2022
    Mary Beard writes interesting books about ancient Rome that are easy to follow
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2011
    Mary Beard rightly chairs the Classics Department at Cambridge University. This work on the history of Roman triumphs should more properly be described as the ancient psychology behind the hundreds of types of triumphs across a thousand years and scores of cultures. I am stunned that one person has enough knowledge to commit this work to paper in a coherent and enjoyable manner. You will be best served if you have a working knowledge of Roman history because Ms. Beard moves quickly and expects much from her readers.

    She essentially deconstructs a celebration by the victorious general and, although its' origins are lost to history, handles the Etruscan roots and the eventual Christian hijacking of the ceremony with a keen eye and an even hand. Her sources are almost exclusively the ancient historians themselves. Although I went into the book with the cartoon version of the slave whispering to the general "remember you are only a man" and the idea of booty and prisoners being displayed in a parade, I came away with what I was seeking. An education. The Roman Triumph was the vehicle to go inside the minds of the ancients, as best as possible. Once there the military, practical, religious, petty personal, and propaganda values of the Triumph become much more clear. You will be reading the writings of a mind of the first order. If you are a classics scholar, I am sure you can take issue with this or that idea she proposes throughout the book; but if you are a regular Roman history reader, you have just struck gold.
    13 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2016
    For Mary Beard, Romans are real people. I like that immensely. A monumentally interesting and appealing read.
    2 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on December 14, 2007
    This book more than fulfills expectations. It is a much needed correction to earlier studies of the triumph. B. calls into question much that has been considered factual knowledge about the triumph by showing the inconsistencies and scarcity of the ancient evidence. A must read for everyone interested in the topic. B. has also gone to great lengths to make the text accessible to a non-scholarly audience, while maintaining high expectations of that audience's willingness to think critically about problems of historical research.
    21 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on August 1, 2023
    The triumph is perhaps the best known – and misunderstood – event in ancient Roman history. There were relatively lots of them, perhaps over three hundred distinct triumphs in the millennium between the founding of the city in 753 BC and the collapse of the Empire in 476 AD, although in some periods, such as the mid-Republic, triumphs were held nearly every year for years on end, while in others, such as the forty years between Trajan’s posthumous triumph of 118 and Marcus Aurelius’s’ triumph over the Parthians in 166, there were none. Distinguished British ancient historian Mary Beard seeks to unravel the mystery of the Roman triumph to better understand its roots, its cultural significance, and its details. In so doing she shows that much of what we think we know about the triumph is either poorly documented, pure conjecture or outright fabrication.

    During the Republican period a triumph was arguably the greatest civic achievement a Roman citizen could hope for. The only thing greater than a triumph was multiple triumphs. Julius Caesar presided over a record five triumphs. Camillus, the semi-legendary statesman and general of the early fourth century, is said to have celebrated four, including his extravagant triumph in 396 BC over the Etruscan city of Veii that set the standard for centuries. Octavian famously celebrated three separate triumphs (Dalmatia, Actium, and Egypt) in one year, 29 BC. Pompey the Great led three triumphs, the first of which he achieved before the age of 25 (Plutarch wrote “He got a triumph before he grew a beard) and the last, over King Mithridates in 61 BC, which was said by many to be the most spectacular triumph in history. According to Pliny, Pompey subjugated over 1,500 towns and killed or captured over twelve million men. He returned home from Asia with over 75 million drachmae in silver coins, more than the annual tax revenue of the entire Roman empire, and ultimately paid into the Roman treasury over 50 million denarii. “The triumph was about display and success,” Beard writes, “the success of display no less than the display of success.”

    In many ways, triumphs brought the glory and conquest of the Roman legions home to the Roman people in a tangible way. Battles were literally re-enacted. The biggest and most fearsome of the enemy POWs were paraded in chains before the gawking multitude. Sometimes the triumph showcased the meritocratic nature of the Roman system. On at least one occasion (when Publius Ventidius Bassus celebrated a triumph over the Parthians in 38 BC), a former prisoner in a triumph went on to gain Roman citizenship and lead a triumph over someone else.

    When it comes to the Roman triumph, Beard emphasizes that there is much we can only speculate about, including some of the most basic questions, such as: Who was allowed to celebrate a triumph? After what kind of victory? Against what kind of enemy? The author says that the origins of the triumph are “objectively unknown.” She further notes that triumphs were requested by victorious generals and not proactively bestowed by the senate on behalf of a grateful nation. Rome’s elite thus often went out “triumph hunting” (cupiditas triumphi in Latin). Securing a triumph usually required a lot of cajoling by the conquering commander, and even then he may come up short. Just consider Cicero, one of the most celebrated statesmen of the Republican period, who wrote six hundred individual letters to senators requesting a triumph in 50 BC, only to settle for a less prestigious supplicatio (roughly 20% of supplicationes were eventually followed by a triumph, but not Cicero’s)..

    The one thing we do know with some certainty about the triumph is who was awarded a triumph and when. One of the most historically important artifacts ever discovered in the ruins of ancient Rome is the Fasti Triumphales. It includes the names of each general awarded a triumph from the founding of Rome in 753 BC to the triumph of Lucius Cornelius Balbus in 19 BC. After Balbus, only emperors or their immediate family were allowed to celebrate triumphs. No longer would a triumph be the ultimate brass ring for the Roman elite to strive for. The last recorded triumph occurred in 534 AD when Belisarius defeated the Vandals in Africa.

    Beard emphasizes that even the most familiar features of a Roman triumph – for instance, the conquering Roman general with his face painted red, riding in a horse drawn chariot, with a slave standing behind him, holding a crown over his head and whispering in his ear, “Look behind you. Remember you are a man” while the crowd chanted “Io triumpe!” – are at best directionally accurate observations recorded by often unreliable, second-hand historians writing many decades after the fact. Everything we know about the triumph is actually stitched together from multiple sources, she warns, such as the works of Pliny, Juvenal, Dio, Josephus, Tertullian, Jerome, and Philostratus. For instance, the claim that at least 5,000 enemy soldiers had to be killed in a single battle in order to qualify for a triumph is only attested to in one source (Valerius Maximus). In short, “No ancient writer presents the whole picture,” the author reminds us. “Precedents could be remembered or forgotten,” she says, “rules defended, adjusted or discarded, and political partisanship dressed up as principle.” Yet, contemporary writers often describe the triumph using mostly “conjecture, wild extrapolation, and over-confidence,” she says, the result being “a brilliant series of deductions, a perilous house of cards, or a tissue of (at best) half-truths and (at worst) outright misrepresentations and misreadings.”

    Beard reminds us that potentially misleading depictions of triumphs don’t just come exclusively from Hollywood, but also the world of art and architecture, from the triumphal frieze of the Arch of Trajan (115) to Andrea Mantegna’s nine-canvas “Triumphs of Caesar” (1492) and Karl von Piloty’s “Thusnelda in the Triumph Procession of Germanicus” (1873).

    In the end, Beard concludes that the entire triumph business is complicated and poorly understood. “The fact is that the Roman triumph, like all rituals, was a porous set of practices and ideas, embedded in the day-to-day political, social, and cultural world of Rome, with innumerable links and associations, both personal and institutional, to other ceremonies, customs, events, and traditions.” There is much we don’t know and likely never will know. Unfortunately, the lack of a reliable historical record makes “The Roman Triumph” an unsatisfying read.
    One person found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on November 28, 2007
    Ms. Beard possesses such command of the subject and immense erudition that she can pull off an enjoyable and well-written book on a specialized topic.

    Of particular value are Ms. Beard's insights into the process by which scholars - from antiquity to today -- have established "facts" of Roman History, and their fragile (if not inaccurate) basis.

    This is highly recommended for anyone with an interest in the history of Rome or Roman History.
    19 people found this helpful
    Report
  • Reviewed in the United States on September 30, 2008
    Lots of interesting info on the Roman triumph, but unfortunately the author gets in the way of her own topic. Statements like "The book will show..." and "I will prove..." belong in the Introduction. Instead, they're all over the place. Phrases such as "Now I'll turn my attention to" and "as we'll see in chapter 9" are littered throughout the book, leaving the reader to feel as though the actual book will, in fact, begin any minute now, we just have a few more previews to get through. I can't stand it when authors continually call attention to themselves like this. Just GET ON WITH IT. Also, whole paragraphs full of rhetorical questions (which historians should we believe? why should we believe them? how do our beliefs color who we end up believing? blah blah blah) put a frequent, and deadly, stop to the narrative. Maybe academicians like this sort of thing, but I don't think the average reader appreciates it. I know I don't. I'm halfway through the book; I'll finish it because of my interest in the subject, and in spite of the author's well-meant but exasperating prose.
    34 people found this helpful
    Report

Top reviews from other countries

Translate all reviews to English
  • André De Troyer
    4.0 out of 5 stars Véritablement une thèse de l'enseignement supérieur consacrée à la cérémonie du triomphe à Rome.
    Reviewed in France on January 16, 2020
    Ce livre, rédigé par une grande érudite de la Rome antique, consiste en une suite d'analyses des différents aspects du triomphe romain. Il renferme par conséquent une multitude de détails sur les critères utilisés aux différentes époques pour accorder - ou refuser- le triomphe au général victorieux, sur les différentes composantes de la parade, et enfin sur la partie finale (et suites éventuelles) de la cérémonie. Le livre est donc très intéressant. Cependant, dans la mesure où il pourrait faire office de thèse de l'enseignement supérieur, il est parfois un peu ardu et exige une grande attention et un grand intérêt de la part du lecteur.
    Report
  • Finuala
    5.0 out of 5 stars I'm sure I have cancelled this but I am having difficulty returning it. Do you not want it back??
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on January 28, 2022
    good products, smart deliery, thanks
  • Almir Bueno
    5.0 out of 5 stars Excelente
    Reviewed in Brazil on July 1, 2024
    Excelente pesquisa sobre o triunfo romano
  • Richard Lewis
    5.0 out of 5 stars Beard as brilliant as ever.
    Reviewed in the United Kingdom on June 1, 2013
    She writes and speaks with such quirky fluency that it's always a delight to read her work or, for that matter, to see her presenting a TV programme.
  • Pierre Gauthier
    1.0 out of 5 stars Beware!
    Reviewed in Canada on January 3, 2012
    This book is not intended for the general public. Very well researched with a bibliography that takes up no less than 24 pages, it intends to be a serious contribution to the apparently hot debate among certain academes regarding Roman triumphs.

    For the non specialist, however, it is of very limited interest. The essence of the work is that the sources on the topic are very incomplete and not necessarily trustworthy.

    The liveliness and originality demonstrated by the same author in `The Fires of Vesuvius' is totally absent here.

    Consequently, this book can only be recommended to those who are already experts in the field.