Best of
Ancient-History
1968
The Near East: 10,000 Years of History
Isaac Asimov - 1968
1968: by Isaac Asimov- The author tells the story of the land between two rivers-the Tigris and the Euphrates- where civilization began.
Caesar: Politician and Statesman
Mattias Gelzer - 1968
The author, Mattias Gelzer, went on to hold the Chair of Ancient History at Frankfurt and to become the greatest German-speaking historian of the Roman Republic since Mommsen. In 1921 he published his Caesar, which has by now gone through six editions in Germany and is still the standard account, in any language, of Caesar and his age. It amply fulfills the author's intent "to give the educated public a lively picture of the complete political career of one of the great statesmen of the past."Based on a conscientious evaluation of the abundant source materials--primarily the writings of Caesar and his contemporaries--Professor Gelzer's portrait renders Caesar in heroic proportions, destined and determined from the beginning to overthrow a corrupt aristocracy. The sixth edition (1960), brought up to date and provided with full annotations by the author, is the basis of this translation, which for the first time makes the work available in English.With Professor Gelzer's approval, some minor errors have been corrected, both in the text and in the chronological table and the map at the end of the book, and an analytical index of names has been added.
The Life and Death of Carthage; A Survey of Punic History and Culture from Its Birth to the Final Tragedy
Gilbert Charles-Picard - 1968
Dawn Of The Gods
Jacquetta Hawkes - 1968
The beginnings of European history, Minoan Crete and Mycenaean culture, classical Greek culture, etc. In her general work on the Minoans (Dawn of the Gods, 1968), Hawkes was one of the first to suggest that the ancient Minoans might have been ruled by women. She noted that very little if any evidence of a Minoan male ruler exists, whereas abundant evidence of such rulers existed among the Egyptians, Hittites, Sumerians and other Minoan contemporaries. Furthermore, images of strong and powerful women abound in Minoan art.