Review by Mary Beard of Adrian Goldsworthy's The Fall Of The West: The Death Of The Roman Superpower: The Long, Slow Death of the Roman Superpower by Mary Beard in last week's Sunday Times:
In AD476 the last emperor of Rome was overthrown in a coup orchestrated by a German general. The deposed emperor was little more than a child, the last and weakest of a series of puppet rulers on the Roman throne. It was a nice irony that his name was Romulus, the same as the legendary founder of the city.
There could be no better symbol of the decline and fall of an ancient superpower. More than a millennium after the foundation of the city, this second Romulus was no charismatic hero like the first - but such a juvenile nonentity that (as Adrian Goldsworthy puts it in The Fall of the West) he was not even “worth the trouble of killing”. He spent the rest of his life in subsidised retirement in south Italy.
Full story here.
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