front cover of The Earliest Romans
The Earliest Romans
A Character Sketch
Ramsay MacMullen
University of Michigan Press, 2013

The ancient Romans' story down to 264 B.C. can be made credible by stripping away their later myths and inventions to show how their national character shaped their destiny.

After many generations of scholarly study, consensus is clear: the account in writers like Livy is not to be trusted because their aims were different from ours in history-writing. They wanted their work to be both improving and diverting. It should grow out of the real past, yes, but if that reality couldn't be recovered, or was uncertain, their art did not forbid invention. It more than tolerated dramatic incidents, passions, heroes, heroines, and villains. If, however, all this resulting ancient fiction and adornment are pruned away, a national character can be seen in the remaining bits and pieces of credible information, to explain the familiar story at least in its outlines.

To doubt the written sources has long been acceptable, but this or that detail or narrative section must always be left for salvage by special pleading. To press home the logic of doubt is new. To reach beyond the written sources for a better support in excavated evidence is no novelty; but it is a novelty, to find in archeology the principal substance of the narrative—which is the choice in this book. To use this in turn for the discovery of an ethnic personality, a Roman national character, is key and also novel.

What is repeatedly illustrated and emphasized here is the distance traveled by the art or craft of understanding the past—"history" in that sense—over the course of the last couple of centuries. The art cannot be learned, because it cannot be found, through studying Livy and Company. Readers who care about either of the two disciplines contrasted, Classics and History, may find this argument of interest.

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Soldier and Civilian in the Later Roman Empire
Ramsay MacMullen
Harvard University Press
The peacetime aspects of the Roman army have never had their historian, Ramsay MacMullen points out. Yet these aspects of military activity became, in the period A.D. 200–400, more and more important and diverse, and drew the army and civilians closer together. The result was militarization of the empire; and, in a lively account of garrison life, army engineering, and similar subjects, MacMullen shows how the process went on. He draws on inscriptions, papyri, and literary sources, and includes relevant illustrations to accompany the discussion of military architecture, equipment, and the social standing of soldiers.
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