classics_chic
Member
I know you've done your trials and everything, but it's not too late to seek new sources, because they are important. I'll provide a list of the ones I know of (I'm mainly a Greece person, but I know of others for Rome, Egypt, and the Near East). Please feel free to add to my list, as it is extensive (for Greece) but by no means exhaustive.
Greece
Herodotos: The Histories (please note: Herodotos is conventionally spelt Herodotus, but I choose to write it in a way closer to the Greek)
Thucydides: History of The Peloponnesian War
Plutarch: The Rise and Fall of Athens
Plutarch: Plutarch on Sparta
Bury and Meiggs: A History of Greece
Murray: Early Greece
Bowra: The Greek Experience
Burkhardt: The Greeks and Greek Civilization
Callendar: The Minoans and The Myceanaens
Cartledge: Cambridge Illustrated History: Ancient Greece
Chadwick: The Mycenaean World
Dillon and Garland: Ancient Greece: Social and Historical Documents from Archaic Times to the Death of Socrates
Fine: The Ancient Greeks: A Critical History
Forrest: A History of Sparta
Graham: Colony and Mother City in Ancient Greece
Homer: The Illiad
Homer: The Odyssey
Leveque: Ancient Greece: Utopia and Reality
Pommeroy et. al: Ancient Greece: A Political, Social, and Cultural History
Robinson: A History of the Ancient World
Powell: Athens and Sparta: Constructing Greek Political and Social History from 478BC
De Romilly: Thucydides and Athenian Imperialism
Taylour: The Mycenaeans
Tonybee: Greek Civilization and Character
Tonybee: Greek Historical Thought
Whitby: Sparta
Luraghi and Alcock: Helots and Their Masters in Laconia and Messenia: Histories, Ideologies, Structures
Rome
Etienne: Pompeii: The Day A City Died
Gibbon: Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
Grant: The Climax of Rome
Grant: The Roman Emperors (warning: popularised history!)
Kamm: Julius Caesar: A Beginner's Guide
Jones and Milns: The Use of Documentary Evidence in the Study of Roman Imperial History
Lewis: The Mammoth Book of How it Happened: Ancient Rome (excerpts of contemporary texts)
Meier: Caesar
Meijer: Emperors Don't Die In Bed
Plutarch: Fall of the Roman Republic
Salmon: A History of the Roman World 30BC to AD 138
Scullard: From The Gracchi to Nero
Scullard: A History of the Roman World 753 to 146BC
Suetonious: The Twelve Caesars
Tacitus: The Agricola and The Germania
Tacitus: The Annals of Imperial Rome
Tacitus: The Histories
(I'll be back later to provide Egyptian and Near Eastern material)
Best of luck!
Greece
Herodotos: The Histories (please note: Herodotos is conventionally spelt Herodotus, but I choose to write it in a way closer to the Greek)
Thucydides: History of The Peloponnesian War
Plutarch: The Rise and Fall of Athens
Plutarch: Plutarch on Sparta
Bury and Meiggs: A History of Greece
Murray: Early Greece
Bowra: The Greek Experience
Burkhardt: The Greeks and Greek Civilization
Callendar: The Minoans and The Myceanaens
Cartledge: Cambridge Illustrated History: Ancient Greece
Chadwick: The Mycenaean World
Dillon and Garland: Ancient Greece: Social and Historical Documents from Archaic Times to the Death of Socrates
Fine: The Ancient Greeks: A Critical History
Forrest: A History of Sparta
Graham: Colony and Mother City in Ancient Greece
Homer: The Illiad
Homer: The Odyssey
Leveque: Ancient Greece: Utopia and Reality
Pommeroy et. al: Ancient Greece: A Political, Social, and Cultural History
Robinson: A History of the Ancient World
Powell: Athens and Sparta: Constructing Greek Political and Social History from 478BC
De Romilly: Thucydides and Athenian Imperialism
Taylour: The Mycenaeans
Tonybee: Greek Civilization and Character
Tonybee: Greek Historical Thought
Whitby: Sparta
Luraghi and Alcock: Helots and Their Masters in Laconia and Messenia: Histories, Ideologies, Structures
Rome
Etienne: Pompeii: The Day A City Died
Gibbon: Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
Grant: The Climax of Rome
Grant: The Roman Emperors (warning: popularised history!)
Kamm: Julius Caesar: A Beginner's Guide
Jones and Milns: The Use of Documentary Evidence in the Study of Roman Imperial History
Lewis: The Mammoth Book of How it Happened: Ancient Rome (excerpts of contemporary texts)
Meier: Caesar
Meijer: Emperors Don't Die In Bed
Plutarch: Fall of the Roman Republic
Salmon: A History of the Roman World 30BC to AD 138
Scullard: From The Gracchi to Nero
Scullard: A History of the Roman World 753 to 146BC
Suetonious: The Twelve Caesars
Tacitus: The Agricola and The Germania
Tacitus: The Annals of Imperial Rome
Tacitus: The Histories
(I'll be back later to provide Egyptian and Near Eastern material)
Best of luck!