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The Republic of Virtue

Episode 5 of 6

Archaeologist and historian Richard Miles examines the phenomenon of the Roman Republic, from its mythical beginnings to the all too real violence of its end.

How did an insignificant cluster of Latin hill villages on the edge of the civilised world become the greatest empire the world has known? In the fifth programme of the series, archaeologist and historian Richard Miles examines the phenomenon of the Roman Republic, from its fratricidal mythical beginnings, with the legend of Romulus and Remus, to the all too real violence of its end, dragged to destruction by war lords like Pompey the Great and Julius Caesar.

Travelling to Sicily and North Africa, Richard tells the story of Rome's century-long struggle for dominance with the other great regional power, Carthage. It was a struggle that would end with the total destruction of this formidable enemy and the transformation of landlubber Rome into a seapower, and the Republic into an Empire. But with no-one left to beat, the only enemy that Rome had left was itself.

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59 minutes

Audio described

Credits

RoleContributor
PresenterRichard Miles
Series ProducerEamon Hardy
Series ProducerTim Kirby
ProducerTim Dunn
DirectorTim Dunn

Broadcasts

  • Wed 8 Dec 201021:00
  • Wed 8 Dec 201022:35
  • Thu 9 Dec 201023:00
  • Mon 13 Dec 201019:30
  • Tue 15 Feb 201101:55
  • Wed 8 Feb 202301:05
  • Tue 14 Feb 202301:00