Cato the Younger: Rome's Last Republican
A Roman History of Stoic Virtue and Defiance Against Julius Caesar
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Narrado por:
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Virtual Voice
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De:
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Dan Rosolini
Este título utiliza narración de voz virtual
The Roman Republic stood at the edge of collapse. The Senate cowered. Only one man refused to bend.
The story of Rome's last defender and the impossible choice that made him immortal —Roman Stoic
Marcus Porcius Cato, Stoic philosopher, incorruptible Roman senator, and Caesar's most relentless opponent, spent his life defending constitutional government against the forces tearing it apart. He walked barefoot with his troops, managed Rome's treasury without stealing a coin, and opposed Caesar for two decades with absolute conviction.
But principle without power couldn't save the Republic. When Caesar's veterans crushed the last Republican army, Cato faced a choice: accept the dictator's clemency or die free. He chose death, reading Plato's Phaedo before stabbing himself rather than live under tyranny.
This is the fall of the Roman Republic told through the life of its most uncompromising defender. A story of Stoic virtue tested by corruption, of one senator's stand against the most powerful man in ancient Rome, and the price of holding absolute principles when power belongs to those willing to break every rule.
For readers of Rubicon, SPQR, and The Storm Before the Storm.