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ROME AND MILITARY STRATEGY - (J.) Lacey Rome. Strategy of Empire. Pp. xiv + 430, ills, maps. New York: Oxford University Press, 2022. Cased, £26.99, US$34.95. ISBN: 978-0-19-093770-6.

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(J.) Lacey Rome. Strategy of Empire. Pp. xiv + 430, ills, maps. New York: Oxford University Press, 2022. Cased, £26.99, US$34.95. ISBN: 978-0-19-093770-6.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 June 2023

Toni Ñaco Del Hoyo*
Affiliation:
Catalan Institution for Research and Advanced Studies (ICREA) / Universitat de Girona
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Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Classical Association

In the prologue to a recently published book (A.J. Echevarria, Military Strategy: A Very Short Introduction [2017]), Echevarria states that ‘no military strategy can guarantee victory, but an inappropriate one all but ensures failure’. L.'s new book on Rome's strategy of empire draws from this concise premise. As a professional strategic analyst (Marine Corps War College) and a former US military officer with an interest in history – from ancient to modern –, he is a suitable author for addressing military strategy in a historical context. Without claiming to have resolved debates that have been raging among Roman scholars since Edward Gibbon, this book takes a different approach to the general understanding of how the Roman empire was able to sustain itself for centuries before ultimately falling to pieces. Despite not being a Roman historian, L. poses the right sort of questions about military strategy in relation to the historical narrative and evidence of the Roman imperial period, thus begging the question of whether – as an analytical tool – it has been properly addressed by modern scholarship dealing with the ancient world.

For instance, L. contends (pp. 92, 120, 146) that the best-known modern work on this topic (E. Luttwak, The Grand Strategy of the Roman Empire [1976]) fails to address several relevant issues pertaining to military strategy that any modern analyst should always bear in mind. In his opinion, any empire out to cement its position in the long run – and the Roman empire was definitely no exception – needed, and still needs, to resolve three fundamental strategic issues: firstly, the building of a sustainable, integrated economy, including the production and mobility of goods through trade networks and communication infrastructures; secondly, the creation of an army stronger and better equipped, through reliable supply chains, than those of its potential enemies; finally, the stimulation of population growth so as to guarantee a steady supply of manpower for an army large enough for defensive purposes. In sum, for L. military strategy does a better job of explaining the longevity of the Roman Empire as a political and military structure, as well as its eventual decline and fall, when some or perhaps all three of the aforementioned strategic issues were no longer tenable (p. 219), than more conventional historical narratives.

In order to achieve this rather ambitious goal, the book is divided into two main sections, one arranged thematically and the other chronologically. The first section comprises Part 1, ‘Themes and Topics’ (Chapters 1–7). Although there is no evidence that strategic thinking was theorised in imperial Rome, L. is of the mind that military strategy was perhaps unconsciously addressed when facing the challenges posed by the defence of its empire. Rome's use of established routes for moving its armies, its knowledge of geography when planning the defence of its frontiers with static forces (pp. 24 and 57), its use of naval power – even on the navigable rivers of Central Europe – for transporting military supplies to the Empire's most far-flung outposts and the need to underpin its financial stability through imperial taxation in order to keep the entire system fully operational are just some of the relevant topics relating to the implementation of efficient strategies presented and discussed in this thematic section. The second section, which focuses on offering a more conventional chronological history of the strategies adopted during the imperial period, comprises Part 2 (Chapters 8–13) devoted to the early empire until the ‘third-century crisis’ and Part 3 (Chapters 14–19) dealing with the late empire until the collapse of the West.

The volume has the merit of prompting us to come up with new arguments for addressing old debates. For instance, a strategic analysis such as L.'s clearly shows that, barring a few exceptions, regular taxation hardly contributed to developing any sort of ‘imperial strategy’ in pre-Augustan Rome (pp. 44 and 157). The obvious reason behind the predominance of mere depredatory policies has to do with the continuous state of war in which the Roman Republic was embroiled for centuries. Instead, imperial Rome financed its basically defensive military strategy through regular taxation (p. 132), since both internal peace and the reduction of external conflicts allowed both the local and the imperial administrations to collect taxes rather efficiently, at least for some time.

That said, it is somewhat surprising that L.'s analysis does not take into account – not even in the index – the substantial contribution of slavery to the Roman economy or even the continuous efforts made by entrepreneurs and traders to supply markets across the empire with slaves when the theatres of war were increasingly more distant. Additionally, L. cites (p. 139 and n. 39) a well-known paper on new measurements of lead pollution in ice cores from Greenland (J.R. McConnell et al., PNAS 115 [2018]) to support his argument in favour of rapid growth of the Roman economy in the Augustan Age and throughout the Principate, which contrasts with the lower levels recorded during the crisis of the Republic. However, further research (D. Pavlyshyn, I. Johnstone and R. Saller, ‘Lead Pollution and the Roman Economy’, JRA 33 [2020]; N. Silva-Sánchez and X.-L. Armada, ‘Environmental Impact of Roman Mining and Metallurgy and its Correlation with the Archaeological Evidence: a European Perspective’, Environmental Archaeology [2023]) has strongly suggested that such measurements should be viewed with greater caution. For instance, this research (including the 2018 paper on the Roman imperial period) has revealed that the mining industry in areas like the Hispanic provinces and even the long period of uninterrupted warfare during the last 150 years of the Roman Republic produced similar levels of lead pollution in Greenland ice.

Overall, L.'s book not only makes a refreshing contribution to the conceptualisation of strategy in historical terms, but also underscores the real importance of military strategy when enquiring into the evolution and eventual collapse of long-standing imperial structures such as those of the Roman Empire.