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Hardcover A Concise History of Byzantium Book

ISBN: 0333718291

ISBN13: 9780333718292

A Concise History of Byzantium

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

This introductory text provides a concise overview of the history of Byzantium, from AD 285, when it first separated from the Western Roman Empire, to 1461, when the last Byzantine splinter state... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Good short overview of Byzantium history

It seems like this is the only English book out there that summarizes Byzantine history using latest scholarly research.The author's primary interest is in the revivals & declines that happened during the long Byzantine history. In a way, he is still responding to Gibbons' history. I think this is important to keep in mind when reading this book.The writing style is clear, and the sections are very evenly divided. As such, besides being a good read, this book provides good pointers for further reading in Byzantine history.

Very Good anyalitical history

This is a very good although brief little book. Byzantium is the name given to the part of the Roman Empire which survived the collapse of the West. Those who lived in it would have known themselves as Romans and Byzantium is very much an artificial name thought up after the event by scholars who had something of a prejudice against the Eastern Empire. This book is a strongly argued rebuttal of that position.The historian who has shaped the popular view of the Roman Empire is Gibbon. His rather long work explores a theme. That theme is that the Roman Empire reached its peak when its members were pagan and immersed in the values of a classical civilisation. The conversion to Christianity changed the nature and structure of the empire and led to its decline. This book broadly suggests that this view is poppycock and it uses a statistical and analytical approach to prove its point. Broadly what is argued is that the reason for the decline of Rome was bound up in the nature of the imperial system in 200 onwards. The basis of the authority of the Emperor was the support of the army. The army in turn consisted of troops who were generally non-roman. Although the Empire was nominally the strongest power in Europe at the time its internal authority was subject to fragmentation and it was this which led to the collapse of the Empire in the West. In the East a similar thing happened. However the Emperors were gradually able to re-assert civil power over the military. In addition it was also possible to build a common culture based on the Greek language and Christianity which unified the Empire and gave those who lived in it a common identity. Rather than declining the Eastern Empire was able under Justinian to go on the offensive and to re-conquer Africa and Italy. Whilst the Empire was to suffer reverses it lasted to 1200 and was still one of the strongest powers in Europe in 1000. This book uses statistics on the revenue of the empire, the size of its army and the extent of its territory to prove it's the central thesis. This book is fare easier to understand than a straight chronological history like that of Norwich. It is a book which cannot be recommended highly enough.

First-rate introduction to 1,000 years of overlooked history

This is a fantastic, accessible introduction to the long and complicated history of a region that often gets overlooked or glossed over. In a little over 250 pages, Treadgold ably summarizes the ebb and flow of an empire which was at the crossroads of Western history. Though he focuses primarily on the political history of Byzantium, Treadgold also includes economic, social, and cultural developments, tying it all together with a conclusion that makes an excellent case for its significance to Western history. This is must reading for anybody interested in understanding how the eastern Roman empire survived the collapse of its western counterpart, as well as how its existence (and its own eventual fall) shaped the world in which we live today.

Concise, clear and to the point. Excellent

Highly Recommended!I wanted to read a good general history of Byzantium, which I knew very little about. This book gives very good coverage of the important points of Byzantine history in just a couple of hundred pages. I now have a good general idea about who and what the empire was. The book is clear and well written with good analysis of economic and population factors as well what the military was doing. I also liked the balanced treatment of role of Christianity and the Church in the empire.

What made the Byzantine Empire tick?

This volume is a shorter version of Treadgold's longer work, "A History of the Byzantine State and Society." I have not had an opportunity to read the larger work, but I certainly will after having derived so much enjoyment from the Concise History.I do believe the volume's title is misleading. Anyone looking for a chronological account of Byzantine history may be disappointed. Treadgold's forte is social and economic history, subjects that hold far more interest for me than accounts of who won what battle on which day, how many times an emperor was married and to whom, etc. If that's your cup of tea, you'd be better off with John Julius Norwich. But if you want to know how Byzantium survived for so long as the richest and most advanced state of the early Medieval world, while providing its subject with reasonably good government and the chance to live secure, productive lives, you should read this book. Treadgold draws upon a web of well-elucidated econonic, social and intellectual/theological trends to derive cogent and convincing explainations for the shifting fortunes of Byzantine political power.How did the Empire raise and finance its gigantic military establishment? How did it hold together its far-flung territories? What effects did recurrent epidemics and other uncontrollable forces have on its destiny? What kinds of lives did its subjects lead in villiage, town and city? How did the Byzantine monetary system function? How much land did the Empire control and how many subjects did it rule at its various peaks and declines? These are some of the questions Treadgold's book attempts and (for the most part) succeeds in answering.In short, this is primarily an analytical look at Byzantine history and only secondarily a chronology of events. Its compact size and overall readibility make it an ideal volume for those of us how want to know not only WHAT happened to the Byzantines, but WHY.
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