Polybius

Polybius

The Histories

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Genre
Geography
Citation
book.chapter.section
Chunks
1311
§1.1.1-1.1.6–§39.8.1-39.8.8
Aligned sentences
48,916
日本語 15078 · English 9528 · 简体中文 11569 · 한국어 12741

Source edition

Polybius. Vols. 1-4. Büttner-Wobst, Theodor, editor. Leipzig: Teubner, 1893.

Source data

Perseus Digital Library · CC BY-SA 4.0

Cloned and adapted by Humanitext, with ongoing edits.

Summary

This monumental work of universal history inquires into the unprecedented historical puzzle of how Rome, in a span of just over fifty years, succeeded in conquering almost the entire inhabited world. Rejecting a mere chronicle of events, the author, Polybius, pursues a pragmatic history that uncovers the underlying causes, motives, and institutions behind historical shifts. The narrative begins with introductory accounts of the First Punic War and the expansion of Rome, and progresses through the grand clashes of the Hannibalic War and the Macedonian Wars across the Mediterranean. Crucially, the work incorporates a meticulous analysis of the Roman constitution and military system, identifying their balanced nature as the core engine of Rome's ascendancy. The latter part of the history depicts the tragic falls of great powers, culminating in the destruction of Carthage and Corinth, and the ultimate subjugation of Greece. Balancing political realism with the drama of human fortune, this work offers readers profound lessons on the rise and fall of empires.

Contents

1311 chunks

Cited by book.chapter.section