Count Belisarius

Robert Graves
4.02
2,832 ratings 245 reviews
A powerful, stirring novel of clashing destinies and list for power, by the author of I, Claudius The Sixth Century was not a peaceful one for the Roman Empire. Invaders threatened on all frontiers; Huns, Vandals, Goths, Saracens, Moors, Persians. But they grew to fear and respect the name of Belisarius, horseman, archer, swordsman and military commander of incredible skill and daring. Belisarius led the Imperial armies wherever the Emperor Justinian sent him; to the Eastern Frontier on the Euphrates, across the Mediterranean to Carthage, and to Rome. In his palace at Constantinople, Justinian plotted and intrigued, dominated by his wife Theodora whose spies were everywhere. Justinian hated Belisarius for his success, his nobility and his universal popularity. But Belisarius was the one man who cold save the Empire...
Genres: Historical FictionFictionHistoricalClassicsNovelsLiteratureWarAncient HistoryRomanItaly
426 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
994 (35%)
4 star
1093 (39%)
3 star
589 (21%)
2 star
123 (4%)
1 star
33 (1%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Robert Graves

Lists with this book

I, Claudius
The First Man in Rome
Claudius the God and His Wife Messalina
Best Books About Ancient Rome
746 books1075 voters
The Hunger Games
Catching Fire
Mockingjay
What We've Read So Far In 2011
5350 books1366 voters
War and Peace
The Iliad
All Quiet on the Western Front
Jane Eyre
Charlotte’s Web
Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows
Names in the title
597 books46 voters