Somewhere beneath the streets of London, four metres down, there is a Roman road. It has been there for two thousand years. The calendar on your wall, the laws that govern you, the political vocabulary you use every day — republic, senate, veto, emperor — all of it traces back to one civilisation that refused to stay in the past.
You already live inside Rome's legacy. You just have not been properly introduced.
Most people's knowledge of ancient Rome is a handful of images — Julius Caesar being stabbed, gladiators fighting to the death, Nero fiddling while the city burns. Vivid. Memorable. And almost entirely incomplete. The real story of Rome is something far richer, far stranger, and far more relevant to the world you live in than any Hollywood version has ever come close to capturing.
Ancient Rome for Beginners changes that.
In this engaging, fast-moving guide, historian Marcus Hale takes you from Rome's legendary founding on seven muddy hills above the Tiber River all the way to the empire's dramatic fall — and shows you exactly why every step of that journey still matters today. You will discover:
- Why Julius Caesar was never actually an Emperor — and why that distinction changed everything
- What gladiators were really like — the truth is far more surprising than the myth
- How Augustus built the Roman Empire without anyone officially noticing
- What daily life actually looked like for the million people crammed into Rome's apartment blocks
- Why the Roman Empire never truly fell — and where it went instead
- The engineering miracle that gave us roads, aqueducts, and concrete that is still getting stronger after two thousand years
Written for curious readers with no prior knowledge of ancient history, this book assumes nothing and explains everything — in plain language, at pace, without sacrificing depth or accuracy.
Rome made every mistake worth studying. It left detailed notes.
Whether you are a complete beginner or simply filling a gap you have always meant to fill, Ancient Rome for Beginners is the clearest, most engaging entry point into one of history's greatest stories.
Your introduction to Rome starts here.