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Twelve Caesars, cheap new, used books  Twelve Caesars (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature)
Author: Suetonius  
ISBN: 185326475X   /   Paperback
Publisher: Wordsworth Editions Ltd   /   1997-08-01
List Price: £3.99
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Customer Reviews:
Suetonius good; Audiobook not so good     
Speaking as an ex-Latin teacher and writer of Roman historical fiction, I have to say I was disappointed in the audiobook. First, it's very abridged. My favourite emperor Titus only gets 10 minutes!

Second, I don't agree with the pronunciation. Someone told Jacobi to pronounce 'Caenis' as 'SEE-niss' rather than 'KAI-niss' as I would pronounce it. And he pronounces 'quaestor' as 'keester'. A very unfortunate choice...

Still, it's Gaius Suetonius Tranquillus.
Stunning     
Suetonius' gossipy palimpsest of the reigns of the first twelve rulers of the Roman Empire has long inspired other writers to incorporate his observations into films and books, due to the attention he gives to the Emperors' physical appearance, habits, dress, and eccentricities. The most famous interpretation of this remains the BBC's superlative 'I,Claudius', written by Jack Pulman and based on the novels by Robert Graves. But these were based on Suetonius' works, and the 6-disc edition features the resonant voice of Derek Jacobi, who of course played Claudius so memorably (and yes, he reprises the role, complete with stutter!). This is very entertaining stuff, and powerfully recreates the atmosphere of paranoia and intrigue in an Empire where the supreme ruler was invested with almost divine power, but agonisingly aware that somewhere, waiting in the wings, someone is poised to bump him off.
If ancient Rome had tabloids...     
Not much is known about the life of Gaius Suetonius Tranquillis. He was probably born in A.D. 69--the famous 'year of four Emperors'--when his father, a Roman knight, served as a colonel in a regular legion and took part in the Battle of Baetricum.

Suetonius became a scribe and noted secretary to the military set, eventually ending up in the service of Hadrian, who was emperor from A.D. 117-138. He was dismissed for 'indiscreet behaviour' with Hadrian's empress, Sabina, but not before doing sufficient research to complete many books of a historical nature. His attempts at philosophy were much less well received, and most of his history has been overlooked by all but classical scholars, but this work, 'The Twelve Caesars' has held the imagination of more than just the scholarly set since it was first written.

Suetonius had the good fortune of speaking to eyewitnesses from the time of the early Caesars. Much of his information about Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, and Nero in fact comes from those who observed and/or participated in their lives. Suetonius is in many ways more of a reporter than an historian--he would record conflicting statements without worrying about the reconciliation (this set him apart from Tacitus and other classical historians who tried to find a consistency in stories and facts.

Suetonius has been described as the tabloid journalist of ancient Rome, because not only did he not appear to check facts (which in fact is not true--he did check, he just didn't try to smooth over the conflicting facts), but he choose to concentrate on the private lives, motivations and personality quirks of his subjects rather than their grand plans, policies and military/political victories. Thus, many details of the lurid scene appear. Suetonius, and this volume in particular, formed much of the basis for Robert Graves as he wrote 'I, Claudius' and 'Claudius the God', which in turn pulled up the popularity of Suetonius in this generation.

Suetonius had first hand knowledge of many of the Caesars who followed the Claudians, and ready access to the archives of the imperial family and the Senate, given his imperial posting.

This translation is not intended to be a faithful rendering of the language (which might well result in a stilted English construct) but rather a faithful account of the stories Suetonius tells. Graves has taken the liberty of changing monetary, date, and technical terms into standard English measurements of close kinship of meaning.

For the record, the twelve Caesars, about whom Suetonius writes, are:

+ Julius Caesar
+ Augustus
+ Tiberius
+ Gaius Caligula
+ Claudius
+ Nero
+ Galba
+ Otho
+ Vitellius
+ Vespasian
+ Titus
+ Domitian

Suetonius held nothing back in writing about the personal habits of the emperors and their families, nor did he hold back in his moral judgement of them. Of Tiberius, for instance, he wrote that Tiberius did so many other wicked deeds under the pretext of reforming public morals--but in reality to gratify his lust for seeing people suffer--that many satires were written against the evils of the day, incidentally expressing gloomy fears about the future.... At first Tiberius dismissed these verses as the work of bilious malcontents who were impatient with his reforms and did not really mean what they said. He would remark: 'Let them hate me, so long as they fear me!' But, as time went on, his conduct justified every line they had written.

Graves' edition of Suetonius is available under many covers, from hard-back study editions to Penguin paperbacks, including a wonderful, finely printed edition by the Folio Society. Take a step back into the seemier side of ancient Rome, the side most history courses overlook in favour of more traditional historical events, and hie thee to the bookstore for this work.

Amusing, shocking and above all, fascinating     
This book gives a fascinating insight into the lives of the twelve men who ruled the early Roman empire. These Ceasars were the most powerful men on earth in their time... and some of them were as mad as March hares.

'Lives of the Twelve Ceasars' will amuse, shock and fascinate you in equal measure as Suetonius guides you through the (often sordid) private affairs. Our author introduces us to the dozy Augustus, the perverse Caligula and the great Julius Ceasar and regales us with a series of 'what the butler saw' tales, jokes, rhymes and rumour.

Many classicists would tell you that as an historian, Suetonius is not worth reading-if you are after an accurate account of the leaders of the Roman empire, he is perhaps not the author for you. However, if you have an interest in the classics and a love of gossip then take a large pinch of salt and prepare to be entertained by one of the world's finest gossip mongerers!

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