107,99 zł
When Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon River, Rome entered a conflict that would permanently transform its political order. What began as a struggle between rival elites became the end of republican government itself and the beginning of imperial autocracy. This account reconstructs the final years of the Roman Republic through the decisions, alliances, and military campaigns that led to civil war. Caesar's growing influence alarmed conservative senators who feared the concentration of authority in a single commander. Political negotiations collapsed as competing factions increasingly relied on military force rather than constitutional compromise. The book also examines how Rome's expanding empire reshaped the nature of political leadership. Victorious generals commanded immense wealth, loyal armies, and direct public popularity unavailable to traditional senatorial institutions. Civil conflict therefore emerged from structural changes that made republican restraint increasingly difficult to maintain. The rise of Caesar appears not merely as the ambition of one individual, but as the culmination of decades of instability in a republic struggling to govern an empire larger than its political system could safely manage.
Ebooka przeczytasz w aplikacjach Legimi lub dowolnej aplikacji obsługującej format:
Liczba stron: 230
Rok wydania: 2026
