| Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| English Books | Anna Centenary Library | 936.302 WEL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 345862 |
| 936.3 JOC A hunter-gatherer landscape : southwest Germany in the late Paleolithic and Mesolithic | 936.302 HIR Tacitus' Germania and Beatus Rhenanus, 1485-1547 | 936.302 RIV Germania | 936.302 WEL Battle That Stopped Rome | 936.30221 RIV Germania | 936.4 BRO The Roman remains of northern and Eastern France : a guidebook | 936.4 BRO The Roman remains of Southern France : a guidebook |
The previously untold story of the watershed battle that changed the course of Western history. In AD 9, a Roman traitor led an army of barbarians who trapped and then slaughtered three entire Roman legions: 20,000 men, half the Roman army in Europe. If not for this battle, the Roman Empire would surely have expanded to the Elbe River, and probably eastward into present-day Russia. But after this defeat, the shocked Romans ended all efforts to expand beyond the Rhine, which became the fixed border between Rome and Germania for the next 400 years, and which remains the cultural border between Latin western Europe and Germanic central and eastern Europe today. This fascinating narrative introduces us to the key protagonists: the emperor Augustus, the most powerful of the Caesars; his general Varus, who was the wrong man in the wrong place; and the barbarian leader Arminius, later celebrated as the first German hero. In graphic detail, based on recent archaeological finds, the author leads the reader through the mud, blood, and decimation that was the Battle of Teutoburg Forest.
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