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≫ PDF Gratis History of Julius Caesar eBook Jacob Abbott

History of Julius Caesar eBook Jacob Abbott



Download As PDF : History of Julius Caesar eBook Jacob Abbott

Download PDF  History of Julius Caesar eBook Jacob Abbott

This book was converted from its physical edition to the digital format by a community of volunteers. You may find it for free on the web. Purchase of the edition includes wireless delivery.

History of Julius Caesar eBook Jacob Abbott

It is interesting to read old histories because it gives one a view of how people thought when the book was written. The author Jacob Abbott was a New England Congregationalist preacher and college professor in the early to mid 19th century. He was also a writer of children's books. I had wondered if this would be a compilation of facts and views from Shakespeare and Caesar's Commentaries, but there was definately more to it than that. He filled in holes left in the Commentaries and Shakespeare's play. It was a fairly short read. The author tried to be evenhanded, but I don't think he really liked Caesar all that much. For someone who wants some basic backgrond on Caesar this would be a good place to go, but you would certain be left wanting more.

Product details

  • File Size 264 KB
  • Print Length 134 pages
  • Page Numbers Source ISBN 1544916590
  • Simultaneous Device Usage Unlimited
  • Publication Date May 17, 2012
  • Sold by  Digital Services LLC
  • Language English
  • ASIN B00847UZUG

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History of Julius Caesar eBook Jacob Abbott Reviews


Easy to read history of Julius Ceasar, his life and times, as well as the life of Pompey as it intersects Ceasar's. Provided the source of some well known sayings and words. Information on how Roman armies operated, and how the Generals of the armies provided the funds for the army.
OK, the best feature was the price. I spent as much time submitting corrections to the text as I did in reading it. I do not know if these errors originated with the author, who managed to create only a much-abbreviated history of one of history's pivotal figures, or with those who accomplished the digitization. In any event, the reader should not expect much, and, certainly nothing either new or insightful.
I really like the way Jacob Abbott writes history. He has a way of making it very accessible (easy to read) and engaging at the same time.
This book was no different. I finished this book in 2 days. Great read. If you want to retreat into the world of antiquity and just enjoy a good read I highly recommend this book. I also recommend another book he wrote Cleopatra which I absolutely loved (actually Cleopatra is a better read only because her life was a little more interesting than Caesars- well that's what I think anyways).
For those---are there those?---who don't know the story of Julius Caesar, this is a great introduction to the great arc of his life. It is told in simple terms, but it gets the timeline right, and after you read this carefully you can dish the man with most anybody.

The cool thing for me was to hear the story retold simply by an American from the 1830s.
This account of the history has a number of things to recommend it, as well as sometimes annoying features. The writing is fast paced and accessible, but often preaches a point of view, and is annoyingly naive at times. It is also unconsciously misogynistic. The book itself was written so long ago, it points out that the use of horse relays , common in the Europe was "never set up in America, and because of trains, will likely never be"
I read the one on Cleopatra first, thanks to Anne Rice's fiction The Mummy for making me interested. Also, I got these for free, since they were written a hundred years ago. And I thoroughly enjoyed them. In a way that I don't normally find myself enjoying nonfiction. I've got bookmarks in so many books that I've started but didn't get so enthused with that I felt I must finish before starting another, but I read this is a couple days. I have, the same as many other book addicts, a large to-read pile, but for the past few days, I've been thoroughly invested in a nonfiction of events 2000 years in the past, ignoring my many new books to read on my phone. Why didn't I enjoy history before?
As a 18 year old functional illiterate, I first read this book while in Vietnam. I had seen what an education was worth. Educated men gave orders, I got shot at. A well educated buddy gave me a copy of this book and a dictionary. I was determined to be the first in my family to get a college education. It took almost 3 months, but was but the first step to becoming a history teacher, principal and school superintendant. The life lessons, the graduate course in leadership and the price of pride are all in this arcane treasure. It just took two days this time, I'm getting old. I read it in one many times!
It is interesting to read old histories because it gives one a view of how people thought when the book was written. The author Jacob Abbott was a New England Congregationalist preacher and college professor in the early to mid 19th century. He was also a writer of children's books. I had wondered if this would be a compilation of facts and views from Shakespeare and Caesar's Commentaries, but there was definately more to it than that. He filled in holes left in the Commentaries and Shakespeare's play. It was a fairly short read. The author tried to be evenhanded, but I don't think he really liked Caesar all that much. For someone who wants some basic backgrond on Caesar this would be a good place to go, but you would certain be left wanting more.
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