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Philip Freeman (1) (1961–)

Autor(a) de Julius Caesar

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24 Works 1,829 Membros 44 Críticas

About the Author

The author of more than a dozen books on the ancient world, Philip Freeman is a professor and chair of the classics department at Luther College. He earned his PhD from Harvard University. He lives in Decorah, Iowa.

Obras por Philip Freeman

Julius Caesar (2008) 327 exemplares
Alexander the Great (2011) 322 exemplares
How to Run a Country: An Ancient Guide for Modern Leaders (2013) — Tradutor — 76 exemplares
Heroes of Olympus (2012) 46 exemplares
Hannibal: Rome's Greatest Enemy (2022) 46 exemplares
Sacrifice: A Celtic Adventure (2015) 26 exemplares
Ireland and the Classical World (2000) 25 exemplares

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Data de nascimento
1961
Sexo
male
Nacionalidade
USA
Educação
Harvard University (PhD)
Organizações
Washington University, St. Louis
Luther College

Membros

Críticas

Freeman is well known in the historical world as the author of what is considered "the best" biography of Julius Caesar. (I have not read). In this book, the author begins at the beginning when Hannibal's, father, Hamilcar Barca, became General of the Carthage forces. Hannibal was aged around 8-10 at this time and swore to his father that he would never become a friend to Rome. After the death of his father and at the age of 26, Hannibal became the General of the Carthage forces. Some print was dedicated to the "story" of the war elephants, but this author said too much is made of that particular episode as it was not nearly as successful as people currently believe. Most of the book centered on the Battle of Cannae in 216 BCE and what Hannibal did and did not do. What he did was surround Rome and route the Roman legion. What he did not do was invade the city proper and raze it; for he could have. He has been hailed as both a hero and a coward for this decision. Hannibal thought it not a wise use of resources nor worth the loss of the tens of thousands of lives it would have cost for an invasion of the city proper.

I also liked this book because the 19 pages at the end listed several of the main scholarly writings from which the author obtained his information. Amongst them: Livy, Polybius, Pinder, and Plutarch. The author attempts to evaluate their bias.
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
Tess_W | Jan 24, 2024 |
Enjoyed it. If felt like it was written for a younger reader until one scene involving pagan rites.
 
Assinalado
HollyAHunt | 4 outras críticas | Nov 2, 2023 |
Decent history and look into the world Sappho would have grown up and lived in. I felt the author's translations, though illuminating in parts (describing the translation difficulties and nuances) were less vibrant than Mary Barnard. I also appreciated the weaving of her poetry to the history and biography, especially in regard to sticking with the female perspective that is so lacking, but I just wish there was more! 160 pages of bio/history left me wanting.
 
Assinalado
Eavans | 1 outra crítica | Feb 17, 2023 |
As with his other biographies, the author has a simple and straightforward writing style which makes the narrative flow smoothly. Given the scope of Alexander‘s momentous achievements, it is easy to become bogged down in the detail of his journeys. However, the author strikes a good balance – he narrates Alexander‘s life and times with sufficient specificity, but maintains the reader’s attention.

An excellent first foray for those interested in Alexander. For those with more knowledge, the book does not present any new or novel concepts, but is still a worthwhile read.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
la2bkk | 7 outras críticas | Aug 19, 2022 |

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Associated Authors

Roger Clark Narrator
Gerard Doyle Narrator
John Lescault Narrator

Estatísticas

Obras
24
Membros
1,829
Popularidade
#14,065
Avaliação
3.8
Críticas
44
ISBN
101
Línguas
5

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