English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

I've tried magazines that are archeology related, but it was way over my head. If you could let me know, that would be great. thanks. <><

2007-01-14 16:11:10 · 2 answers · asked by ichthus607 2 in Arts & Humanities History

2 answers

Go to the Library and ask about that and if you want to learn about that online there are many good site. Just go to search.com and type Ancient Rome and the early Church.
Good Luck!

2007-01-14 19:04:00 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Do you propose 'sturdy' as in 'properly written and readable' or 'sturdy' as in 'properly-researched and precise'? there's a great form of finished nonsense obtainable so, in case you want to determine you're examining something properly researched, examine the comments earlier you purchase. See in case you will locate comments by applying a historian (eg Tom Holland, Mary Beard, even Simon Schama for gods sake) - they assist you to understand if a e book has been properly researched or if it quite is the literary equivalent of the mini-sequence. listed right here are a number of my techniques, which lean in the direction of the 'properly researched' end whether i does no longer advise them in the event that they weren't additionally sturdy to examine. i'm afraid i've got no longer examine something based on the legions that did no longer make me want to throw it around the room and burn the author yet i'm beneficial there is sturdy stuff obtainable. For an superb non-fiction account of the top of the Roman Republic attempt Tom Holland's Rubicon. Robert Harris is writing a trilogy of novels with regard to the comparable era interior the form of a biography of Cicero - Imperium, Lustrum and a 0.33, no longer yet revealed. they're impeccably researched and fairly readable. His Pompeii is likewise superb and is unusual in no longer focussing on the sentorial classification. For sheer scandal (and a great form of protection stress factor) attempt lots of the classic aspects - Suetonius and Tacitus spring to strategies. Penguin Classics sequence are properly translated and uncomplicated to examine. and of direction you won't be able to beat Robert Graves' I, Claudius for uncomplicated clarity - he used the classic aspects in basic terms so there's a great form of unsubstantiated gossip in there yet i do no longer understand the different Rome-based novel that brings the characters so shockingly alive.

2016-12-12 11:39:40 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers