Essay Topic Hub

Rome
Essays

1,421+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

1,421 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Rome as a subject of academic study spans disciplines including ancient history, classical studies, art history, political science, and religious studies. Students encounter Rome in courses that trace the foundations of Western civilization, examine the dynamics of empire and power, and analyze the spread of Christianity and the institutional Church. The sheer breadth of Roman history — from the legendary Seven Kings of Rome through the Republic, the expansion of the Roman Empire, and its eventual fall — makes it one of the most analytically rich topics in world studies. Its entanglements with neighboring civilizations, particularly Carthage and Greece, and its lasting influence on Italy and modern governance give scholars multiple entry points for sustained academic inquiry.

The papers collected on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Comparative essays examine Rome alongside other powers, such as the Han Dynasty, or trace architectural and artistic legacies through formal analysis. Historical narratives focus on specific conflicts like the Punic Wars or biographical subjects like Julius Caesar. Other papers take cultural and mythological angles, exploring Greek and Roman mythology or the role of structuralism in classical myth. Some essays engage with Rome's religious transformation and the rise of Christianity, while art historical work analyzes specific objects and monuments in their imperial context.

A strong essay on Rome requires a clearly bounded thesis — focusing on a specific period, figure, conflict, or legacy rather than attempting to survey the entire civilization. Primary evidence drawn from ancient historians and material culture carries particular weight. The most common pitfall is conflating Greek and Roman traditions without acknowledging where they genuinely diverge.

1,421 papers
Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Ancient Kingdoms- Expansion and Empire Building Ancient
Ancient kingdoms and their expansion strategies were uniform throughout the ancient world. Persia, Rome, Athens and Sparta had expanded their kingdoms by means of conquests, wars and consolidation.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Chemistry through time: historical development and concepts
Transported into 100 B.C. Rome with Latin fluency, and comprehension of and in possession of 21st century knowledge; the task of dazzling the Roman Senate with the articulation of triumphs and successes of scion…
Thesis Masters
The first cities: origins and development of early urban settlements
Before humans documented history, the beginning of civilization, humans were primarily were hunter-gatherers. This meant human tribes moved from place to place using only what they were able to obtain from their natural…
Paper Undergraduate
Kung and Edwards an Analysis
An Analysis of Theology in Dennis Edwards' Ecology at the Heart of Faith and Hans Kung's a Global Ethic
Research Paper Doctorate
Roman architecture: history, characteristics, and influence
¶ … Roman public architecture contained elements derived from both Greek and Etruscan traditions. Spatially, Roman architecture shows a development from closed, simple space units and regular articulation to more…
Research Paper Doctorate
Compare and Contrast Gilgamesh and Aeneas in Virgil\'s the Aeneid
The Epic of Gilgamesh and Virgil's Aeneas exemplify ancient epic poetry. Both works trace the psychological evolution of a semi-divine male hero who meets with immense personal trauma and hardship.
Essay Doctorate
Caesar After the Death of Julius Caesar,
After the death of Julius Caesar, Rome and its Republic were in chaos, but out of this chaos emerged an unlikely candidate for succession, a young nephew of Caesar named Octavian. Julius Caesar had already set the…
Essay Doctorate
Major intellectual leaders of the Enlightenment
What with the ideological turmoil occurring prior to most of 18th century Western Europe, the Age of Enlightenment was but an inevitable outcome. Religious and political thoughts littered Europe by the spades, and with…
Research Paper Doctorate
Dutiful Children of Loving God
Martin Luther's 1520 treatise on the Freedom of a Christian (sometimes translated from the German "Von der Freiheit eines Christenmenschen" as "A Treatise on Christian Liberty") developed key aspects of his theology.
Research Paper Masters
American Vacation Time/Holidays in the United States,
In the United States, people live to work while in other areas of the world people work to live. Or at least, this is a common stereotype about Americans and people who live in other parts of the world.