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Tables of Contents for Considerations on the Causes of the Greatness of the Romans and Their Decline
Chapter/Section Title
Page #
Page Count
Translator's Preface
vii
 
Introduction
1
22
Beginnings of Rome; Its Wars
23
10
The Art of War Among the Romans
33
6
How the Romans were Able to Expand
39
4
The Gauls; Pyrrhus; Comparison of Carthage and Rome; Hannibal's War
43
12
The Condition of Greece, Macedonia, Syria, and Egypt After the Reduction of the Carthaginians
55
12
The Conduct the Romans Pursued to Subjugate all Peoples
67
12
How Mithridates was able to Resist them
79
4
The Dissensions that Always Existed in the City
83
8
Two Causes of Rome's Ruin
91
6
The Corruption of the Romans
97
4
Sulla; Pompey and Caesar
101
12
The Condition of Rome After Caesar's Death
113
6
Augustus
119
10
Tiberius
129
6
The Emperors from Caius Caligula to Antoninus
135
10
The Condition of the Empire, from Antoninus to Probus
145
12
Change in the State
157
10
New Maxims Adopted by the Romans
167
8
Attila's Greatness; Cause of the Settlement of the Barbarians; Reasons why the Western Empire was the First to Fall
175
10
Justinian's Conquest; His Government
185
10
Disorders of the Eastern Empire
195
6
Weakness of the Eastern Empire
201
12
Reason for the Duration of the Eastern Empire; its Destruction
213
8
Index
221