A nineteenth-century book that revolutionised scholarly views on ancient Rome and the understanding of history as an academic discipline.This three-volume English translation of Niebuhrs History of Rome (from the second, revised German edition) appeared between 1828 and 1842. At a time when the field was developing rapidly, Niebuhrs book had a lasting impact on its own subject area and the understanding of history as an academic discipline.This three-volume English translation of Niebuhrs History of Rome (from the second, revised German edition) appeared between 1828 and 1842. At a time when the field was developing rapidly, Niebuhrs book had a lasting impact on its own subject area and the understanding of history as an academic discipline.This three-volume English translation of Barthold Georg Niebuhr's influential History of Rome was published between 1828 and 1842. It follows the second German edition, which the author contrasts with the earlier edition (18111812, translated into English in 1827) as being 'the work of a man who has reached his maturity'. The early part of the nineteenth century saw important developments in philological scholarship in Germany, and Niebuhr's international career as a statesman and scholar reflected Germany's new-found confidence in the wider world. His book had a lasting impact both within its own subject area and on the understanding of history as an academic discipline, and was a landmark of nineteenth-century European scholarship. Volume 1 covers the origins of Rome in Ancient Italy, up to the secession of the commonalty, and the Tribunate of the People.Preface; Introduction; Part I. Ancient Italy: 1. The Oenotrians and Pelasgians; 2. The Opicans and Ausonians; 3. The Aborigines and Latins; 4. The Sabines and Sabellians; 5. The Tuscans or Etruscans; 6. The Umbrians; 7. Iapygia; 8. The Greeks in Italy; 9. The Ligurians and Venetians; 10. The Three Islands; 11. Conclusion; Part II. The Preliminary History of Rome: 12. Aenealó!