An Update On Our Publication
Changes for 2026
Dear lector augustus,
As February comes to close, we’d like to share a brief update with you about the direction of the publication.
In the coming months, James will take the lead as the primary writer, while Evan will contribute more selectively. This change allows us to focus our efforts and ensure the continued quality of what we publish.
As part of this transition, our regular publishing schedule will move to one article per week. To reflect this adjustment, we are reducing our subscription price to $6.90/month or $49.90 annually, effective from today. If you are already a paid subscriber, you don’t need to do anything: billing will update automatically.
Our commitment remains what it’s always been, which is to provide thoughtful and high-quality work that rewards your time and attention, focused on the practical wisdom we can learn from the greatest leaders, thinkers, and artists of the past, through their own words and deeds. If you are new to INVICTUS, below you can find a quick look back at five pieces which have proved especially popular with our readers in recent months.
In the meantime, we continue to be honoured to count you among our readers, and sincerely grateful for your continued support.
As always, thank you for reading, and we look forward to this next phase of INVICTUS!
Ad finem fidelis,
-Evan & James
The Regrets of Casanova
The popular culture of the late twentieth and early twenty first centuries has done much to convince a tragic number of men and women alike that the hedonistic life is the only one ‘worth’ pursuing.
Aristotle's Advice on Living the Good Life
The wisdom of the great philosophers of Antiquity is often admired but seldom digested.
When Your Friends Get Eaten In Front of You
Two weeks ago, I released a 2.5 hour interview with Dr. Fernando Cervantes, a descendant of Miguel de Cervantes and the greatest living historian of the conquistadors. (You can watch it here)
What Makes a Hero?
220 years ago today, Britain experienced a day of glory and tragedy without equal in her history.








