A map of the people, events, places, and ideas that shaped Rome’s final century.
The Republic did not fall because one man crossed one river. It fell because a political culture built for a city-state could no longer contain the empire it had created.
Version 1.2 begins the Livarva Atlas: people, events, places, and themes extracted from the trilogy’s historical world.
Romulus, Hannibal, Scipio, Marius, Sulla, Pompey, Caesar, Cicero, Cato, Cleopatra, and the wider human world of the Republic.
From the founding myths and expulsion of kings to Sulla’s proscriptions, Caesar’s Rubicon, and the Ides of March.
Rome, the Forum, Palatine, Praeneste, Numidia, Gaul, Alexandria, Utica, and the Mediterranean world of Roman power.
Dignitas, virtus, libertas, clementia, mos maiorum, auctoritas, patronage, citizenship, dictatorship, and republic.