Caesar and his contemporaries created a desert and called it peace...
Then left that to their successors, and who was to know at the time that the most intelligent and creative man ever to have lived in history was coming to save that world, broken and battered as it was, and to create an Empire that would last another 1500 years and influence all that was to come possibly for all time.
Yet how is Augustus, also known by his real name (Augustus only being adopted once he was ruler of the known world) as Octavian, adopted son of Julius Caesar, capable of such mastery and propaganda, and the natures of and games played by the most powerful men of the Roman elite? Who was this provincial nobody, this young boy (as Cicero called him), this skillful spin doctor, and how did he appear as if from nowhere, ready to take on the might of Cicero Mark Anthony and the experienced men of Rome, to grasp his birthright of adoption by his great-uncle, and end up as the last man standing after the most famous battle in European history?
Here we have the story of the greatest man who was never given that honour. He's been assessed as a psychopath, the luckiest man to have lived, a spin doctor, a saint. Yet the man behind the mask was probably just like you and I, merely luckier and more able to use his friendships and own intellect to take the world and turn it upside down... then to sit back and become a totally different man, like a chameleon, and rule with an iron fist inside a silk glove for over forty years, leaving an empire that would last til the destruction of Constantinople in 1492.
This book explores the battles, the rivalries, the preface and afterword of his life, seeking to explain his behaviour and actions without resorting to labels such as psychopath, though I'm sure there is a basis for such a diagnosis. Personally, I believe he was suffering from Fibromalgia, something for historians to explore further, perhaps.
A well-written and absorbing book with a few issues. I found the going boring a little at times, a dryness escaping the pages that I felt a wish to spice up! A biography of a man of contradictions, though of course, are we not all a collection of contradictions? I think anyone wanting to know more, and not put off by my own admiration for Augustus (I know, but I do feel he is under rated, under appreciated and not nearly celebrated enough.) If Caesar had ruled for forty years after his conquest of Gaul and seizing of the dictatorship, perhaps he would have been as under-celebrated as well. Heroes die young, after all. The winners change the world and die in their beds as old men. Augustus was the greatest winner in history that we know.
A book worth reading, I promise! A man worth knowing about, I guarentee!