
The Private Lives of Rome s Good and Bad Rulers - The Twelve Caesars was the first ancient book I ever read. Before then I had only known Classical history from the books written by modern day historians. In the intervening years I have read many other primary sources from this period, but Suetonius s work still stands as the richest and most readable look on Rome s Emperors.Suetonius recounts the successes and failures as well as the private lives of the first twelve rulers of Rome after the fall of the Republic . He begins with Julius Caesar, then discusses Augustus at length before covering Tiberius, Caligula, Claudius, Nero, Galba, Otho, Vitellius, Vespasian, Titus and Domitian.What makes the book a joy to read are the inclusion of many fascinating anecdotes - many of them are highly amusing, disgusting, bizarre or funny. He tells us about Caesar s embarassment about his baldhead, Claudius s mocked fight with a giant whale at the port of Ostia, Augustus s love of having the hairs on his legs flattened by warm walnuts and Caligula s ban on the mention of goats in his presence. These descriptions help bring the old emperors to life - You ll never see them in the same light the next time you see a solemn bust of Galba or Domitian at a museum.Suetonius has often been considered an unreliable witness by many historians, but Michael Grant discusses the veracity of his work at the beginning of the book, showing us that the old court historian was much more reliable and less biased than many would suppose.Robert Graves s translation is wonderful. The text is lucid and very readable. Graves would go on to use the information gained from this work to write his seminal novels I, Claudius and Claudius the God , which were made into a highly acclaimed series in 1976.The book also contains genealogical tables, maps, a discussion on coin portraits, a glossary of unfamiliar Roman terms, a Chronological table of the reigns of the emperors, a Key to place names (ancient and modern), a further reading list, and an index.This is a must have for anyone interested in the early history of the Roman Empire, or anyone who loves Classical civilisation.