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Military History Quarterly Spring 2007 David G. Frye |
Rome's Barbarian Mercenaries How the "Roman" army came to be composed of barbarian troops of an often renegade nature is in many ways the story of Rome's fall. |
Military History Erik Hildinger |
Belisarius' Bid for Rome As Byzantine Emperor Justinian revived the Eastern Roman empire, he sent his greatest general west to retake Rome. |
Military History Quarterly Summer 2007 Adrian Goldsworthy |
Caesar's Triumph in Gaul When diplomacy failed against his former Gallic allies, Julius Caesar embarked on a savage military campaign. |
Military History Jul/Aug 2007 James Lacey |
Rome's Craftiest General: Scipio Africanus The resolute consul who rallied Cannae's broken legions to challenge the great Carthaginian general Hannibal. |
Military History Margaret Donsbach |
Celtic War Queen Who Challenged Rome It was easy for Emperor Nero to dismiss a woman from a barbarian tribe in faraway Britannia. But when Boudica and her warriors decimated a legion, Rome took her seriously. |
Military History Quarterly Gregory G. Bolich |
Military Technology: Using a Cloud of Dust in Ancient Warfare In the ancient world, a clever commander could use clouds of dust and dirt to gain a great victory and avoid a crushing defeat. |
Military History September 3, 2004 Lee Levin |
Rome vs. Carthage: The Day the World Trembled While Carthaginian General Hannibal Barca threatened Rome, in 207 bc his brother, Hasdrubal, entered Italy. To keep the two armies from combining, Roman commander Gaius Claudius Nero made a desperate, risky decision. |
Military History Quarterly Spring 2006 Gregory G. Bolich |
Terrorism in the Ancient Roman World Pax Romana was the rule against nations, but even the empire could not control vandals, rogues, and rebels. |
Military History Richard Gordon |
Stopping Attila: The Battle of Chalons Flavius Aetius' confrontation with Attila the Hun in AD 451 is widely regarded as a turning point in history, but it may only have hastened the fall of the Western Roman Empire. |
Military History December 2007 Richard A. Gabriel |
The Roman Navy: Masters of the Mediterranean The Romans started with no navy or naval warfare experience, but that didn't stop them from ruling the seas for more than four centuries |
Military History Quarterly Rose Mary Sheldon |
Toga & Dagger: Espionage in Ancient Rome Ancient Rome is remembered as one of the greatest military powers in history, its fame derived from the fearsome reputation of the empire's legionnaires. Lost in the telling, however, is the important role that espionage played in Rome's ascent to empire. |
Military History Richard Tada |
What We Learned... from the Battle of Carrhae Superior weapons, superior tactics, superior logistics, psyops and treachery can carry the day -- even against 3-to-1 odds. |
Parameters Autumn 2007 Christopher M. Schnaubelt |
Whither the RMA? The present Department of Defense (DOD) focus on technological solutions to increase capabilities may be misguided by a vision of a high-tech Revolution in Military Affairs (RMA). |
Salon.com August 27, 2002 Lawrence Osborne |
"Cicero" by Anthony Everitt Ancient Rome's greatest politican and public speaker lived a life of intrigue, betrayal and violence -- and no American leader today can hold a candle to him. |
Macworld July 25, 2006 Peter Cohen |
Legion Arena Just the thing for armchair generals, Legion Arena brings you back to the glory days of the Roman Empire for a good old-fashioned bloodletting. |
High on Adventure October 2001 |
Turkey's Ancient Metropolis of Ephesus Greeks, Romans, and Early Christians Speak Through the City's Stones... |
Outside December 2007 Carl Hoffman |
Strange Bird Need something (or somebody) flown around Africa without a lot of questions? Can you pay with bricks of cash? Then you want old-school bush pilot Tim Roman, a man with a deft touch on jungle runways, and a place on every smart dictator's speed dial. |
ifeminists August 18, 2007 Julia Cuthbert |
When the Vanquished Paint the Pictures The same wars are portrayed very differently in these two books, Gardner's Art Through the Ages, and America: A Narrative History. One looks from a historical perspective, and the other from an art historical one. |
Civil War Times December 2003 Eric Ethier |
Who Was the Common Soldier of the Civil War? Here's what the statistics tell us. |
The Motley Fool November 19, 2008 Todd Wenning |
An Open Letter to Congress An analyst writes to Congress on the state of the economy. |
D-Lib December 1999 Jay King |
Roman History, Coins, and Technology Back Pages The Roman History, Coins, and Technology Back Pages site was created with a primary mission of providing resource and enrichment material for K - 12 students and their teachers who are studying Roman history... |
Search Engine Watch June 16, 2010 Andy Atkins-Kruger |
The Google Killer No One Dares Discuss The global Google killer will come from the organization which best connects human knowledge together via mobile phones. |
Real Travel Adventures November 2007 Kregg P.J. Jorgenson |
When in Rome? The tour guide in Rome was sadly misinformed. Get this, according to her the ancient Romans didn?t speak English, they spoke Latin! Tsk, tsk, tsk! Silly girl. The author has some fun with his Italian tour guide. |