Yeah, everyone else sucks so hard that their versions of history pale in comparison.
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Yeah, then I'd give you 8/25, as OCD entries would only fill in the blanks about 'Describe' questions.
Are you suggesting that there are two different spheres of history, one inside and one outside of academia? Because all I know is that Bradley is accessible history.
If you mean something like 'more formal study of history', say above a highschool level, I would agree with you. Bradley is for people who have no time to read more than a summary.
Although, I will point out that tonight, I couldn't remember something about Marius. I was looking all through Plutarch and Sallust, and I just could not find this line I remembered.
I look around at all my books, and there is Bradley's
Ancient Rome: Using Evidence. What do you know, someone who isn't a historian managed to help me find the reference which was in Appian. Not only that, she discussed how Appian's account of a part of Marius' life is different to Sallust's. I didn't even pick up on that, as it'd just slipped by.
I'm at a tertiary level, so I would usually say that whilst Bradley isn't an appropriate source for high-level education, she is very useful.