☛See Classical Studies for books on Roman life and literature.
A Companion to Latin Studies. Edited by Sir John Edwin Sandys. Second edition. Cambridge, 2013. —A huge fat book full of chronological tables and information on every aspect of Roman culture up to and beyond the end of the Empire.
The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. By Edward Gibbon, Esq. London: Printed for W. Strahan and T. Cadell.
Volume
the First. 1776.
Third
edition, 1777.
Volume the Second.
Second
edition, 1781.
Volume the Third. 1781.
Volume the Fourth. 1788.
Volume the Fifth. 1788.
Volume the Sixth. 1788.
History of Rome, and of the Roman People, from its origin to the invasion of the barbarians. By Victor Duruy. Translated by M. M. Ripley. Edited by the Rev. J. P. Mahaffy. Containing over three thousand engravings, over one hundred maps and plans, and numerous chromo-lithographs. —We have put together this collection from the editions of several different publishers, all well-scanned at the Internet Archive. In most editions, each volume is split into two parts, but in some the volumes are bound as one volume. We have found specimens of each except in the case of Vol. IV, for which we have no single-volume copy, and Vol. VIII, for which we have no copies in two sections.
Vol. I: Section One, Section Two.
Vol. II: Section One, Section Two.
Vol. III: Section One, Section Two.
Vol. IV: Section One, Section Two.
Vol. V: Section One, Section Two.
Vol. VI: Section One, Section Two.
Vol. VII: Section One, Section Two.
A History of the Ancient Working People from the earliest known period to the adoption of Christianity by Constantine. By C. Osborne Ward, Translator and Librarian, U. S. Dep’t of Labor. Washington: Press of The Craftsman, 1889.
The Jews Among the Greeks and Romans, by Max Radin. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America, 1915.