What made Julius Caesar unstoppable?
He was not simply Rome's greatest general. He was one of history's most dangerous strategic thinkers.
In Julius Caesar: Power, Strategy and the Fall of the Republic, Gordon J. MacKenzie examines the rise of the man who transformed Roman politics and changed the course of Western civilisation. From his early struggles against Sulla's dictatorship to his conquest of Gaul, from the dramatic crossing of the Rubicon to the collapse of the Roman Republic, Caesar's career reveals the brutal logic of power.
This book explores Caesar not only as a historical figure, but as a master of strategy. His ability to build alliances, shape narratives, exploit political divisions, and act decisively under pressure offers enduring lessons about leadership, ambition, and risk.
Through battles, political manoeuvres, and personal rivalries, Caesar built a position so dominant that the Roman Republic could no longer contain him. His assassination in 44 BC was meant to restore the old order. Instead, it unleashed the forces that would lead to the Roman Empire.
Clear, accessible, and grounded in historical scholarship, this volume examines the strategic choices that defined Caesar's rise and the fatal tensions that brought him down.
Part history and part strategic analysis, Julius Caesar: Power, Strategy and the Fall of the Republic reveals why Caesar remains one of the most influential leaders in world history.