Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Decline and Fall of Pompey the Great

View through CrossRef
Although the last phase of Republican Rome is so familiar to us, Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus remains a figure rather than a man. His was the statue beneath which the murdered Caesar fell, and he is still for most of us the figure in the background: Shakespeare passed him by. His vast fame has left the man himself remote.It was his tragedy that he could not read the writing on the wall. It was partly clouded for him, as all things gradually became clouded, by the deepening shadow of his own portentous greatness. With his solid abilities, too, he had not a streak of genius or political insight. History can show few worse statesmen. He became the chief agent of the doomed Republic without realizing that it was doomed, and lived quite uninspired by that republican idea which animated men so different as Cicero and the younger Cato.If he had not been outclassed, and defeated in battle, and finally eclipsed, by Julius Caesar, he could have lived in history as the Roman Empire's mightiest architect. He claimed with some reason to have subdued three continents. If not a great general, he was certainly a very good one, and in his younger days he could always get the best out of his soldiers. He was, above all, a good organizer. His campaign against the Mediterranean pirates, whom he swept from the seas in three months, was an unqualified triumph.He was stabbed to death at Pelusium by hangers-on of the Egyptian court 2,000 years ago on 29 September.
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Title: Decline and Fall of Pompey the Great
Description:
Although the last phase of Republican Rome is so familiar to us, Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus remains a figure rather than a man.
His was the statue beneath which the murdered Caesar fell, and he is still for most of us the figure in the background: Shakespeare passed him by.
His vast fame has left the man himself remote.
It was his tragedy that he could not read the writing on the wall.
It was partly clouded for him, as all things gradually became clouded, by the deepening shadow of his own portentous greatness.
With his solid abilities, too, he had not a streak of genius or political insight.
History can show few worse statesmen.
He became the chief agent of the doomed Republic without realizing that it was doomed, and lived quite uninspired by that republican idea which animated men so different as Cicero and the younger Cato.
If he had not been outclassed, and defeated in battle, and finally eclipsed, by Julius Caesar, he could have lived in history as the Roman Empire's mightiest architect.
He claimed with some reason to have subdued three continents.
If not a great general, he was certainly a very good one, and in his younger days he could always get the best out of his soldiers.
He was, above all, a good organizer.
His campaign against the Mediterranean pirates, whom he swept from the seas in three months, was an unqualified triumph.
He was stabbed to death at Pelusium by hangers-on of the Egyptian court 2,000 years ago on 29 September.

Related Results

Lucan's "Auctor Vix Fidelis"
Lucan's "Auctor Vix Fidelis"
This paper provides a narratological analysis of Lucan's Bellum Civile, focusing on the role of internal and external narratees (receivers of a text). In particular it treats Pompe...
Pompey, Cato, and the Governance of the Roman Empire
Pompey, Cato, and the Governance of the Roman Empire
This book examines attempts to improve provincial governance from 70–50, particularly the contributions of Gnaeus Pompeius Magnus and the younger Marcus Porcius Cato. It contends t...
Fall Risk Assessment Using Morse Fall Scale and STRATIFY Fall Scale
Fall Risk Assessment Using Morse Fall Scale and STRATIFY Fall Scale
Abstract: The purpose of this study was to identify the value of fall risk assessment using Morse fall scale and STRATIFY fall scale, to identify the sensitivity and specificity of...
Non Fit Morte Miser: Pompey The Great as Aristotelian Tragic Hero in Lucan’s Bellum Civile .
Non Fit Morte Miser: Pompey The Great as Aristotelian Tragic Hero in Lucan’s Bellum Civile .
Abstract: Pompey’s character in Lucan’s Bellum Civile provokes the same emotions as the tragic hero. Like an Aristotelian tragic hero, Pompey is condemned by fate but also exhibits...
Blunt Chest Trauma and Chylothorax: A Systematic Review
Blunt Chest Trauma and Chylothorax: A Systematic Review
Abstract Introduction: Although traumatic chylothorax is predominantly associated with penetrating injuries, instances following blunt trauma, as a rare and challenging condition, ...
When Did Pompey the Great Engage in his imitatio Alexandri?
When Did Pompey the Great Engage in his imitatio Alexandri?
The aim of this article is to revisit the issue of Pompey the Great’s imitatio Alexandri, especially the timetable for its beginnings and development. Previous studies of the subje...
[RETRACTED] Keanu Reeves CBD Gummies v1
[RETRACTED] Keanu Reeves CBD Gummies v1
[RETRACTED]Keanu Reeves CBD Gummies ==❱❱ Huge Discounts:[HURRY UP ] Absolute Keanu Reeves CBD Gummies (Available)Order Online Only!! ❰❰= https://www.facebook.com/Keanu-Reeves-CBD-G...
Midlife Marital Status and Subsequent Cognitive Decline over 20 Years: Discovery from ARIC
Midlife Marital Status and Subsequent Cognitive Decline over 20 Years: Discovery from ARIC
Background — Recent studies show that marriage is associated with a protective effect against cognitive decline among older adults. However, definite evidence from large prospectiv...

Back to Top