If we open Google Images and type "Roman Legionary" or "Greek Hoplite" most likely among the images that pop up, and I'm talking about drawings, there will be a drawing by Peter Connolly.
His work as a researcher, historian and artist lasted a lifetime and left a lot to all fans of the sector. Peter Connolly, who died in 2012, not only edited his books from a textual point of view, with an ease of exposure and serious analysis of the sources, but he also embellished them with his fantastic art and diagrams. The preface by Adrian Goldsworthy (another eminent antique history expert) is perfect in capturing the feelings of those who have found themselves in front of Connolly's books, with a passion that has often become a reason for living.
The book I present to you today does not really need much introduction, being perhaps Connolly's most important work, "Greece and Rome at War". There is no doubt that anyone who is fond of this rather long historical period that goes by the name of "Ancient History" and whoever has an interest in the military aspect of that history cannot fail to know this text which I would define as "seminal". It is in fact present in almost all the bibliographies of authors who treat antiquity from a purely military point of view.
But I have to write a review as if people don't know this amazing book, and then I pretend you really don't know it and are browsing it for the first time.
The book, first released in 1981 was reprinted several times. The volume we review today is reprinted thanks to Frontline Books in a paperback edition, but solid enough.
The book still amazes today for its drafting and clarity. Greece and Rome at war. Period. First part dedicated to Greece in its classical and then Hellenistic phase (with a good section dedicated to Alexander the Great), second part dedicated to Rome and the Western Mediterranean (the origins of Rome in short, and its clashes in the Republican era). A third part is dedicated to the Roman Empire, its expansion and its wars (divided in turn in the period up to 200 AD and from 200 AD to the fall, in 450 AD). Small appendices (small compared to the book, but certainly not insignificant) dedicated to the War on the Sea and the Siege War, with a final section dedicated to the Roman Military Costume.
Listing only one strength of the book would be like belittling it. Connolly's historical exposition (which manages to identify exactly the path taken by the Persian army to circumvent Leonidas at Thermopylae) clear and profound. The beautiful drawings of huge battle scenes, or amazingly reproduced figures. The clear diagrams that perfectly explain how the Manipular Legion or the Macedonian Phalanx moved. Again the drawings that represent the swords and other relics found in the excavations, the genealogy of the Greek or Roman-Celtic helmets etc.. Everything contributes to creating the perfect history book, useful to the historian, to the enthusiast, to the neophyte, to the model maker, even to those who do not understand anything of history and want to give birth to a love that will last a lifetime like Adrian Goldsworthy wrote in his preface.