^ooh, will read the book first then
Reading Caesar's Commentaries. It is about the war in gaul. Unbelievable to read directly, the accounts of one of the greatest war commanders in history. 52 BC, and it still feels like it has not aged.
One big revelation was yes, Caesar does refer to himself in third person, but while reading it, it does not appear to be from vanity or pride, as depicted in say the Asterix comics. It is more for the sake of clarity, and to give an impersonal and objective view of things, as if someone other than Caesar had written it.
(there are some things which I had not heard of at all before, such as burning your own villages before marching to war to ensure you fight that much harder, or marrying off your own mother for diplomatic reasons, or that Caesar fought on the front lines, not just giving orders.)
Anyone have recommendations, anything before 1000 AD, memoirs of or accounts by historical figures who were not primarily authors