The best leaders know when to push forward - and when to stop.
This Trajan spiral notebook features a cinematic portrait of the emperor who brought Rome to the peak of its territorial power, part of the Rome's Greatest Emperors collection. A distinguished notebook for the desk, classroom, or study - and a thoughtful gift for history enthusiasts, classics lovers, and students of leadership. Premium paper, metal spiral binding, compact format built for daily use.
ABOUT TRAJAN (53 – 117 AD)
When the Senate declared Trajan Optimus Princeps (the best of emperors) they were not being polite. It was a formal title, awarded by acclamation, and it stuck. No Roman emperor before or after received it. Two thousand years of subsequent history have done little to argue with the judgment.
Trajan came from Spain, the first emperor born outside Italy, and he brought with him a soldier's directness and an administrator's patience. He expanded the empire to its greatest territorial extent, conquering Dacia in two brutal campaigns and annexing parts of the Middle East that Rome had never controlled. Trajan's Column, still standing in Rome, tells the story of those campaigns in 155 carved scenes spiraling toward the sky.
But conquest was only part of the record. Trajan oversaw an ambitious building program across the empire, reformed the grain supply, and established the alimenta - a welfare system that used state funds to support orphaned and impoverished children in Italian towns. It was an unusual combination: a general who won wars and then came home and fed children.
He died in 117 AD while returning from campaign, having pushed the empire as far as it would ever go. His successor Hadrian immediately began consolidating rather than expanding. The high-water mark had been reached.
PRODUCT FEATURES
- 90 gsm paper for a smooth, bleed-resistant writing experience
- Metal spiral binding for flat, easy page turning
- Document pocket inside cover for notes and loose pages
- 118 ruled pages
- Compact 6" x 8" format