
New Books Network The Augustan Revolution: On Ancient Rome with Reece Edmends
Mar 11, 2026
Reece Edmends, a Roman historian and junior faculty member at Princeton who wrote a PhD on Augustan propaganda, walks through Rome’s Republic-to-Empire transition. He explores how Augustus framed himself as a restorer of liberty, used legal and cultural tools to secure power, and enlisted poets and omens to shape public memory. The conversation also touches on slavery, Pax Romana benefits, and why the fall of the Republic still resonates.
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How Childhood Fort Visits Sparked A Roman Career
- Reece Edmends' childhood visiting Roman forts in England and reading Robert Harris and Colleen McCullough sparked his lifelong interest in Rome.
- He credits Tom Holland's Rubicon for solidifying his decision to study Classics at Cambridge and research the late Republic.
Augustus Used Liberty Rhetoric To Mask Autocracy
- Augustus built his power by presenting himself as a conservative restorer and a 'vindicator of liberty' rather than an explicit monarch.
- Edmends shows how invoking the Roman legal figure adsertor libertatis framed Augustus as a protector who deserved deference while masking autocracy.
The 27 BC Settlement Hid Real Imperial Power
- Augustus avoided taking an obvious crown and instead accepted limited constitutional powers that in practice gave him command of the most crucial provinces.
- Edmends points to the 27 BC settlement and control of key provinces like Egypt and grain fleets as the mechanism that secured his supremacy.










