Rex Juba
15 Glimpses of an African King
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Description
This is terribly good.
I've wanted to read a biography of Juba II of Mauretania all my life and here it is.
The African scholar-king married to Cleopatra Selene, daughter of the triumvir Mark Antony & Cleopatra VII, queen of Egypt. It's
a delight and a must-read
.
This is terribly good.
I've wanted to read a biography of Juba II of Mauretania all my life and here it is.
The African scholar-king married to Cleopatra Selene, daughter of the triumvir Mark Antony & Cleopatra VII, queen of Egypt. It's
a delight and a must-read
.
Colourful, engaging and timely,
this portrait of a man caught between two worlds
captures the full beauty and complexity of the ancient world.
Seventeen images of ancient artefacts introduce Juba, North African client king and Greek intellectual, and place him in
the limelight of Roman history
. With its striking arrangement,
Rex Juba
is
a fine piece of storytelling, written with verve and style.
Juba II of Mauretania and his wife, Cleopatra Selene – daughter of the famous Cleopatra – are astonishing figures of history, and far too little known. With so much focus on Rome and the beginnings of empire in Italy, there’s hardly any talk of these two gritty and powerful rulers who ruled in north Africa in the wake of the devastating wars of the Republic. In
Rex Juba
, Kenrick has penned
a gripping read, packed with historical detail, that offers insights into an extraordinary ruler at an extraordinary period of history
.
Few lives in the ancient world were as improbable as that of Juba II – African prince, Roman hostage, turned scholar-king of Mauretania, who navigated power, identity, and empire at
one of history's great turning points.
Andrew Kenrick has written
a textured and richly sourced story that showcases his complex and fascinating life.
A wonderful biography of a man who lived many lives - as a hostage, a scholar, a soldier, a king, a father and a husband - and
a fascinating exploration of identity and empire building
across the full sweep of the ancient Mediterranean.
A brilliantly told story of an important and much overlooked Roman king
which
expands our conception of the Roman Empire
.
Dr Andrew Kenrick
teaches Creative Non-Fiction at the University of Cambridge. His interdisciplinary studies have taken him from ancient history and archaeology to the movie
Gladiator
and Roman cooking, as well as researching new methods for writing ancient biography. His proposal for
Rex Juba
won the Biographers' Club Tony Lothian Prize.