Roman history mary beard5/25/2023 ![]() ![]() On her favorite films and TV shows set in ancient Rome "Just as long as we realize that that's what they are." "There's no reason not to enjoy those stereotypes and have all the fun with them," she says. Beard says it's "one of the most famous quotes in the whole of Roman history - except it certainly isn't what Caesar ever said."ĭespite her tendency to "myth-bust" ancient Rome, Beard still enjoys popular cultural representations of the empire. Take, for instance, "Et tu, Brute?", William Shakespeare's version of Julius Caesar's final words. "The historical texts and the historical evidence that you use is always somehow giving you different answers because you're asking it different questions."īeard notes that history is a shifting discipline, and that many of our popular notions of ancient Rome are based on culture rather than fact. "One of the great things about history is that it sort of isn't a done deal - ever," Beard tells Fresh Air's Dave Davies. She has written several books on the subject - including her most recent work, SPQR: A History of Ancient Rome - but she doesn't feel like she's close to being done with the topic. ![]() ![]() Historian Mary Beard has spent her career working through the texts and source materials of ancient Rome. ![]()
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