Storia degli Italiani, vol. 02 (di 15)

audiobook

Storia degli Italiani, vol. 02 (di 15)

by Cesare Cantù

IT·~10 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total

C. CANTÙ STORIA DEGLI ITALIANI TOMO II.

0:14

CAPITOLO XIX. Gli schiavi. — Guerre civili.

31:02

CAPITOLO XX. Guerra Giugurtina. Mario e i Cimri. Guerra Sociale.

57:34

CAPITOLO XXI. Silla. — Mitradate. — Prima guerra civile. — Restaurazione aristocratica.

48:44

CAPITOLO XXII. Sertorio. — I gladiatori. — I pirati. — Pompeo.

48:33

CAPITOLO XXIII. La costituzione sillana abolita. L'eloquenza. Cicerone. Verre.

38:16

CAPITOLO XXIV. Scompiglio della proprietà. Consolato di Cicerone. Catilina.

42:15

CAPITOLO XXV. Gli storici. — Cesare. — Primo Triumvirato. — Spedizioni contro le Gallie e i Parti.

1:20:59

CAPITOLO XXVI. Seconda guerra civile.

31:35

CAPITOLO XXVII. Dittatura di Cesare.

39:25

Description

A sweeping chronicle of Italy’s early centuries, this volume turns its eye to the everyday foundations of Roman society. By tracing the legal conventions that defined ownership, it reveals how concepts of justice were woven from pacts, decrees, and the stark realities of conquest. The narrative shows how the law treated slaves not as persons but as property, shaping everything from inheritance to criminal liability.

The author paints a vivid picture of bustling slave markets, where men, women, children, and even the educated were inspected, priced, and sold like merchandise. Detailed accounts of contracts, punishments, and the brutal economics of the trade bring the ancient world’s contradictions to life, highlighting the chilling precision of Aquilian compensation and the social hierarchies that sustained them. Readers encounter the grim logistics of capture, transport, and the daily lives of those bound to serve.

Beyond mere description, the work invites reflection on how these early institutions cast long shadows over later Italian history. By juxtaposing the raw mechanisms of slavery with the emerging ideas of law and citizenship, it offers a nuanced portrait of a civilization wrestling with its own humanity.

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Details

Language

it

Duration

~10 hours (624K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Giovanni Fini, Barbara Magni and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2020-10-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Cesare Cantù

Cesare Cantù

1804–1895

A hugely prolific 19th-century Italian man of letters, he wrote history, fiction, and political works with the energy of someone trying to explain an entire age. Best known for his sweeping historical writing, he helped shape how many readers of his time understood Italy's past.

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