Michael Grant’s History of Rome is as standard and
scholarly a depiction on this subject as you will find anywhere. It is not
highly original or challenging in its conclusions. But it is an interesting and
easy read by a historian who mastered his topic and was a skilled, methodical
writer. Using his consummate understanding and proficient writing ability,
Grant leads the reader from the Etruscan Period through the fall of the Western
Empire after the split between Rome and Constantinople. He accomplishes this
task in approximately 500 pages. Given that such breadth of time is often
covered in twenty volume enterprises, one must admire the author’s concision.
While the insights Grant offers are hardly original, they
are beautifully expressed with all of the thoughtful complexity intended by the
progenitors of these ideas:
“Hannibal was…one of the world’s most noble failures, an
altogether exceptional man who took on, in deadly warfare, a nation empowered
with rocklike resolution—and that nation proved too much for him. It emerged
hardened from the supreme test, and ironically, his most lasting achievement
was to confirm and magnify its confidence and power” (Grant, p. 127).
In a couple of short sentences, the historian conveys
Hannibal’s character, Rome’s tenacity, and the fascinating paradox that
Hannibal produced the opposite of his intention despite heroic efforts of
genius.
One surprising feature of this book is the inadequacy of its
endnotes. They exist primarily as a further discussion of events and issues;
not as confirmation of the statements to which they refer. Sometimes, during
the process of explication, Grant will reveal the name of an individual who is
a source (as he does in discussion of the claim that Jesus was born earlier
than 4 BC [Grant, p. 499]). But even in that instance, he does not tell the
reader where he found that source. Most often, he simply offers no information
to permit one to investigate his interpretation. It is understood that history
is not a science. But the more evidence a work offers, the more accuracy it
will contain. Statements and conclusions that are drawn from primary sources,
and from the real science of archaeology, are the evidence of history. Notes
are the documentation of that evidence. Without accurate documentation,
historians cannot confirm or falsify each other’s findings. Consequently, it is
impossible to tell how the writer arrived at a conclusion. Statements without
evidence are no better than legend.
But this is the only major flaw in an otherwise exceptional
synoptic history. It is a difficult task to present a brief account of an
extensive time period, about which so much has been written. Among such
projects, there is a tendency to over-generalize and present a bare-bones
outline, leaving the reader without rich thought or detailed picture of life.
Grant performs a superior service by elegantly balancing his subject’s flow and
the Empire’s evolution, with instructive, personally relatable features in
which history lives. If your goal is to obtain an overview of the Roman Empire,
you could hardly do better than to pick-up this volume.
Grant, Michael. History of Rome. New York: History
Book Club, 1997.
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