Servus Audiolivro Por Emma Southon capa

Servus

How Slavery Made the Roman Empire

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Servus

De: Emma Southon
Pré-venda: Ouvir com teste grátis

R$ 19,90/mês após o teste gratuito de 30 dias. Cancele a qualquer momento.

Pré-compre agora por R$ 74,99

Pré-compre agora por R$ 74,99

Sobre este título

We associate the Romans with majesty and greatness: we marvel at their straight roads and innovative underfloor heating, at the dominance of their army and navy, at the grandeur of their palaces and temples. But the Romans were also enslavers. They built an empire on the backs of millions of people snatched from their homes in the aftermath of war, kidnapped from the streets, sold into slavery as punishment or, simply, born enslaved.

Servus takes us into the invisible spaces of the Roman world, where millions of enslaved lives were unwillingly dedicated to the perpetuation of the empire that owned them. From the fields of wheat required to give every Roman their daily bread, to the actors and gladiators who provided their circuses, and the miners who kept Rome a city of gold and marble, enslaved people were the bedrock of the Roman Empire. These enslaved people were ubiquitous, but silenced. Through the fragments they left behind, historian Emma Southon traces the pain and tragedy of their lives alongside the love stories, lifelong friendships, small victories and hard-won freedoms.

Servus tells the truth about the Roman empire and the unseen lives that made it so dominant.
Antiga Históricas Mundo

Resumo da Crítica

Emma Southon turns her unique combination of unflinching academic gaze and irrepressible sharp humour to that darkest and most depressing of subjects, Roman slavery, providing a much-needed corrective to centuries of obfuscations and misunderstandings. Servus is a challenging read yet a simultaneously sensitive and even entertaining one, striking that peculiar balance that, of all the Romanists writing trade history today, only Emma can fully achieve. (Jane Draycott, author of FULVIA)
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