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Mortal Republic
Mortal Republic: How Rome Fell into Tyranny | Edward J. Watts
2 posts | 1 read | 5 to read
A new history of the Roman Republic and its collapse In Mortal Republic, prize-winning historian Edward J. Watts offers a new history of the fall of the Roman Republic that explains why Rome exchanged freedom for autocracy. For centuries, even as Rome grew into the Mediterranean's premier military and political power, its governing institutions, parliamentary rules, and political customs successfully fostered negotiation and compromise. By the 130s BC, however, Rome's leaders increasingly used these same tools to cynically pursue individual gain and obstruct their opponents. As the center decayed and dysfunction grew, arguments between politicians gave way to political violence in the streets. The stage was set for destructive civil wars--and ultimately the imperial reign of Augustus. The death of Rome's Republic was not inevitable. In Mortal Republic, Watts shows it died because it was allowed to, from thousands of small wounds inflicted by Romans who assumed that it would last forever.
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Nitpickyabouttrains
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A history of the Roman republic and how it fell.

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Ostaff1
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Perfect weekend read. “[the USA is] the constitutional descendant of Rome ... inherited both the tremendous structural strengths that allowed the Roman Republic to thrive for so long and some of the same structural weaknesses...makes it vital for all of us to understand how Rome‘s republic worked, what it achieved, and why, after nearly five centuries, its citizens ultimately turned away from it and toward the autocracy”

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