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The battle that stopped Rome : Emperor Augustus, Arminius, and the slaughter of the legions in the Teutoburg Forest / Peter S. Wells.

By: Wells, Peter S.
Material type: Book; Format: print; Nature of contents: biography; Literary form: Non-fiction; Audience: Juvenile; Publisher: New York : W.W. Norton, c2003
Summary:
In A.D. 9, a traitor from the Roman military named Arminius led an army of barbarians who trapped, and then ferociously butchered, three entire Roman legions, a quarter of the Roman army stationed north of the Alps. It was a blow from which the empire never recovered. If not for that battle, the Roman Empire might have extended as far as present-day Russia. However, after this disaster, the demoralized Romans ended their efforts to push beyond the Rhine, which remains to this day the cultural border between Latin Western Europe and Germanic Central Europe. Wells describes life within the magnificent city of Rome and on the Roman frontier, puts a human face on the barbarians of lore, and leads the reader through the mud, blood and slaughter that was the Battle of Teutoburg Forest.--From publisher description.
Edition:
1st ed.
Description:
256 p. : ill., maps ; 22 cm.
ISBN:
0393020282 (hardcover)
9780393020281 (hardcover)
0393326438 (pbk.)
9780393326437 (pbk.)
Subject(s):
Online resources:
Contents:
Ambushed! -- Creation of the legend -- History and archaeology of the battle -- Augustus : Rome's first emperor -- Varus and the frontier -- Arminius : the native hero -- Warfare in early Roman Europe : prelude to the battle -- The battle -- The horror : death on the battlefield -- The victors' celebrations -- The immediate outcome -- The meaning of the battle -- Sources and suggestions for further reading -- Appendixes: How an archaeological site is formed ; Roman weapons found at the Kalkriese battle site ; Museums, Roman remains, and archeological parks.
Summary:
In A.D. 9, a traitor from the Roman military named Arminius led an army of barbarians who trapped, and then ferociously butchered, three entire Roman legions, a quarter of the Roman army stationed north of the Alps. It was a blow from which the empire never recovered. If not for that battle, the Roman Empire might have extended as far as present-day Russia. However, after this disaster, the demoralized Romans ended their efforts to push beyond the Rhine, which remains to this day the cultural border between Latin Western Europe and Germanic Central Europe. Wells describes life within the magnificent city of Rome and on the Roman frontier, puts a human face on the barbarians of lore, and leads the reader through the mud, blood and slaughter that was the Battle of Teutoburg Forest.--From publisher description.
Enhanced content: Content Cafe
Holdings
Item type Home library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Adult Book Adult Book Monterey Public Library Adult NonFiction 936.302/WEL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 31971005374934
Total holds: 0

"Sources and suggestions for further reading": p. 227-238.

Includes index.

Ambushed! -- Creation of the legend -- History and archaeology of the battle -- Augustus : Rome's first emperor -- Varus and the frontier -- Arminius : the native hero -- Warfare in early Roman Europe : prelude to the battle -- The battle -- The horror : death on the battlefield -- The victors' celebrations -- The immediate outcome -- The meaning of the battle -- Sources and suggestions for further reading -- Appendixes: How an archaeological site is formed ; Roman weapons found at the Kalkriese battle site ; Museums, Roman remains, and archeological parks.

In A.D. 9, a traitor from the Roman military named Arminius led an army of barbarians who trapped, and then ferociously butchered, three entire Roman legions, a quarter of the Roman army stationed north of the Alps. It was a blow from which the empire never recovered. If not for that battle, the Roman Empire might have extended as far as present-day Russia. However, after this disaster, the demoralized Romans ended their efforts to push beyond the Rhine, which remains to this day the cultural border between Latin Western Europe and Germanic Central Europe. Wells describes life within the magnificent city of Rome and on the Roman frontier, puts a human face on the barbarians of lore, and leads the reader through the mud, blood and slaughter that was the Battle of Teutoburg Forest.--From publisher description.

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