In A Day in Old Rome: A Picture of Roman Life, William Stearns Davis reconstructs the rhythms of imperial Rome through a vivid, hour-by-hour portrayal of urban experience. Blending social history with imaginative historical synthesis, the book illuminates domestic customs, class relations, religion, law, spectacle, and the built environment of the capital at its height. Davis writes in a lucid, accessible prose style that reflects early twentieth-century historical scholarship while drawing on classical sources to create a textured panorama of everyday Roman civilization. Davis was an American historian best known for making the ancient and medieval worlds intelligible to modern readers. Trained as a scholar of history and deeply invested in pedagogy, he wrote for students and general audiences who needed more than political chronology: they needed lived context. His interest in institutions, social practices, and the human dimensions of the past clearly shaped this work, which seeks to animate Rome not as abstraction but as inhabited reality. This book is especially recommended for readers of classical history, ancient social life, and historical reconstruction. It remains valuable not merely as an introduction to Rome, but as a model of how scholarship can recover the texture of daily life with clarity, learning, and narrative force.






