Explore how Pompey the Great, Rome’s military genius, reshaped the eastern empire by defeating piracy and Mithridates VI, yet ultimately fell to Julius Caesar, illustrating the fatal contradictions of the late Roman Republic.
From Augustus to Constantine, the Praetorian Guard evolved from imperial protectors into kingmakers—policing Rome and wielding military force to decide succession.
Julius Caesar: military genius, politician, and reformer whose Rubicon, affair with Cleopatra, and assassination on the Ides of March reshaped Rome and Western history.
Caius Marius transformed Rome’s legions in 107 BCE: recruiting the poor, standardizing arms, creating cohorts and the eagle standard—paving the path to empire and civil war.
Explore the transformative journey of Lucius Cornelius Sulla, a key figure in Roman history. Discover how his military leadership and radical reforms reshaped the governance and legal systems of the Roman Republic, leaving a lasting legacy.
The relationship between military success and political power in Rome is a defining characteristic of its historical narrative, especially during the late Republic and early Imperial periods. A powerful military often supported political ambitions, leading to a complex relationship that shaped governance and societal structure.