| Management number | 233447062 | Release Date | 2026/06/27 | List Price | $6.62 | Model Number | 233447062 | ||
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THE FLAVIAN DYNASTYRestoration, Steel, and the Empire RebuiltGreat empires don’t collapse only from invasion.They collapse from succession crises, civil war, broken finances—and rulers who mistake fear for control.After the bloody chaos of the Year of the Four Emperors, Rome needed more than a new face. It needed a new system of stability—a regime that could pay the legions, control the provinces, and rebuild public trust. That is where the Flavians begin.“Roman Emperors: THE FLAVIAN DYNASTY— Part Two” takes you into the hard, practical age of the Flavian Dynasty—an era where order was rebuilt with taxes, reforms, discipline, and monumental architecture that turned power into stone.This is not a book of legends.It is a historical exploration of POWER, LEGITIMACY, STATE CONTROL, and PROPAGANDA—how a ruler stabilizes a fractured empire… and how the same machinery can harden into suspicion, repression, and tyranny.From Vespasian, the soldier-emperor who restores Rome’s treasury and launches the Colosseum, to Titus, the widely admired ruler shaped by war and catastrophe, to Domitian, the complex emperor trapped between competence and paranoia—this book follows the human minds behind imperial authority, and the price Rome paid for “order.”This is not pseudo-mysticism.This is context, evidence, and analysis.It asks questions that still matter today:How does a regime rebuild legitimacy after civil war?When does “security” become an excuse for repression?How do monuments, public games, and coinage turn politics into belief?Why do some rulers become symbols of restoration—while others become warnings?WHAT YOU’LL FIND INSIDEVESPASIAN — the general who becomes emperor: discipline, taxation, and the hard logic of stabilityTHE YEAR OF THE FOUR EMPERORS — how crisis opens the door to a new dynastyROME REBUILT — administration, finances, loyalty, and “order” as a governing strategyTHE COLOSSEUM — architecture as propaganda and the empire’s public faceTITUS — the “good emperor,” shaped by war, duty, and short-lived ruleDOMITIAN — the tragic ruler: Senate conflict, security politics, and the mechanics of fearLESSONS OF POWER — how empires recover… and how they break againWHO IS THIS BOOK FOR?Readers of Ancient Rome, imperial history, and political powerAnyone fascinated by civil war, propaganda, leadership, and state controlReaders who want mechanisms and strategy, not romanticized storiesAnyone who wants to understand how a society is rebuilt after collapse—and what it costsNOTE:Independent historical analysis. Not affiliated with museums, institutions, or official Roman/archaeological authorities. Read more
| ASIN | B0GSMPGJHG |
|---|---|
| ISBN13 | 979-8252085333 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Independently published |
| Dimensions | 6 x 0.26 x 9 inches |
| Book 2 of 3 | Ancient Rome |
| Item Weight | 7.8 ounces |
| Print length | 112 pages |
| Publication date | March 14, 2026 |
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