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The Ruin of the Roman Empire: A New History Books

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Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 937.06
EAN: 9780060787370
ISBN: 0060787376
Label: Ecco
Manufacturer: Ecco
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 448
Publication Date: September 01, 2008
Publisher: Ecco
Release Date: September 16, 2008
Sales Rank: 34998
Studio: Ecco




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Product Description:


The dream Alexander the Great and Julius Caesar shared of uniting Europe, the Medi­terranean, and the Middle East in a single community shuddered and then collapsed in the wars and disasters of the sixth century. It was a looking-glass world, where some Romans ideal­ized the Persian emperor while barbarian kings in Italy and France worked tirelessly to save the pieces of the Roman dream they had inherited. At the center of the old Roman Empire, in his vast and pompous Constantinople palace, the emperor Justinian, with too little education and too much religion, set out to restore his empire to its glories. Step by step, the things he did to bring back the past sealed the doom of his entire civilization.



Historian and classicist James J. O'Donnell—who last brought us his masterful, disturbing, and revelatory biography of Saint Augustine—revisits this old story in a fresh way, bringing home its sometimes painful relevance to issues of our own time.



With unexpected detail and in his hauntingly vivid style, O'Donnell begins at a time of apparent Roman revival and brings us to the moment of imminent collapse that just preceded the rise of Islam. Illegal migrations of peoples, religious wars, global pandemics, and the temptations of empire: Rome's end foreshadows our own crises and offers hints how to navigate them—if we will heed this story.





Customer Reviews
Average Rating:  out of 5 stars

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Great Read
I will leave this short and to the point, others have already covered the high points. The book is great. Well written and enjoyable to the scholar or the casually interested person.

I only gave it four out of five because I disagree with the author's premise. I ascribe to a more traditional narrative of the Collapse of the Western Empire as found in Peter Heather's or Brian Ward-Perkins' latest books.

Dr. O'Donnell's book is the best defense of modern revisionist history ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - All it needs is a John Williams soundtrack...
This book - which I greatly enjoyed - also roused in me some deep feelings which, at the risk of self-indulgence, I am moved to share.

As an adolescent, coming of age in a midland city in England, feeling somewhat estranged because I was not English, I became rooted in my new environment by embracing and cherishing its medieval buildings, or what the Luftwaffe had left of them. Mostly this was churches, but also street patterns and a bit of city wall. Always a rather dreamy child, not ... Read More



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Visionary revision
Excellent read, sometime in love with his own quirky type of address, one has the suspicion the writer sacrifices a balanced view to the turn of a witty phrase. But the research and the revision of history contradicting a Gibbon-type Fall of the Roman Empire is fascinating and convincing.



Rating: 3 out of 5 stars - Beware of jacket reviews
To be fair, I rated this book at 3 stars only because computer software requires a rating. I have not read it, but I happened upon it today at my local bookstore and paged through it for quite a while. It appears very lively and broad-brush and outspoken and interesting in its observations. Just what I normally would like. But I'm getting old so the adjectives "lively and broad-brush" now also raise to me high alert as to whether a book is well-sourced in scholarship. This book is relatively thin ... Read More



Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Fall? Which Fall?
For a couple hundred years after Gibbon's time, the common wisdom was that Rome's empire in the West finally fell to overwhelming and violent barbarian invasions during the 5th century CE (although the precise date and the underlying causes were much disputed). In the 20th and 21st centuries a newer theory gained much ground, claiming that Rome did not fall but merely transitioned from a more or less unitary classical culture to a very decentralized early medieval world over perhaps 200 years (and with ... Read More





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