In the third and final book which he wrote about his campaigns
in the Civil War, Caesar tells the story of his fight with Pompey
in 48 B.C. which ended in the rout of the latter at Pharsalus;
perhaps Caesar's most notable military victory. The book ends
with Caesar pursuing Pompey to Egypt. Here began Caesar's celebrated
affair with Cleopatra. At this point the book, and the whole work,
ends abruptly.
With this volume the Author's edition and commentary on Caesar's
Civil War becomes the first complete commentary in English
for a hundred years and is considerably more detailed than currently
available annotated texts and translations in other languages.
The main emphasis of the commentary, as before, is historical,
but Caesar's literary technique is also scrutinised. The Latin
text is newly constituted with a brief apparatus criticus.
John Carter was Senior Lecturer in Classics at Royal Holloway and Bedford New College, University of London and a noted authority on Roman history and amongst other works is the editor of Civil War I & II in this series.
232pp. (1993) cl 582 8 £35 / $59.99, pb 583 6 £16.50 / $28
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Foreword INTRODUCTION Note on the Text THE CIVIL WAR BOOK III
Maps Indexes |
SOME COMMENTS BY REVIEWERS
"A sound, independently constructed, judicious
and readable text... a clear and idiomatic translation... authoritative
and sensitive annotations... indispensable." CR
"This volume with its extensive and authoritative commentary
of some 96 pages, seems to avoid any charge of trying to please
too many people. It is a scholarly work with useful references
and cross-references..." LACT
RELATED BOOKS
CAESAR The Civil War Book I & II
Other books in the series about Roman History: CASSIUS DIO, CICERO,
LIVY, LUCAN, PLINY, PLUTARCH, SENECA, SUETONIUS, TACITUS