In originality, Pedro Ángel Fernández Vega wins anyone when writing about Rome, something that demonstrates the bibliography of this doctor in ancient history from the University of Cantabria, which has treated from the corruptions of the city of Tiber to the persecutions derived from the scandal of the bacanal, through an alternative study of the leadership in the Second Punic War in which Scipio and Aníbal are practically secondary characters.
Now, Fernández Vega returns offering the reader History of Rome. Origins, a work edited by ARPA in whose pages we find how Rome was founded and how it went from monarchy to the Republic, combined with an agile exposition of the facts that forces us to redefine what we know about the origins of populism, the trip to democracy or the role of women in ancient times.
Read tooTo what extent is history and to what myth what we know about the ori...
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