2024; 367 pages. Book 4 (out of 4, but eventually 6) in “The
Fall of the Roman Empire” series. Full
Title: Justinian’s Empire – Triumph and Tragedy. New Author? : No. Genres : Ancient History; Rome; Non-Fiction. Overall Rating : 9*/10.
I learned the date in my World History class: The Roman Empire collapsed in
476 CE when the Goths sacked Rome.
Except, at the risk of
splitting hairs, that wasn’t its total end.
Yes, the Western Roman Empire was no more. But the Eastern Roman Empire,
with its capital of Constantinople, was doing relatively well, at least as long
as it was happy to simply maintain its present borders.
True, those pesky Persians kept raiding along its eastern borders; buying-&-selling was throttled by the smallest
currency one could use in a solid gold coin; and worst of all, the populace was bitterly
divided over whether Jesus was both human-&-divine, or just plain
old divine. But those issues are nothing that a
dynamic Emperor can’t fix.
Unfortunately, the present
one, Anastasius, is a bit underqualified.
I sure hope the next Emperor is better.
What’s To Like...
Nick Holmes divides Justinian’s
Empire into four parts, namely:
Part 1. New Rome,
New Romans: pg. 26, 12 sections.
Part 2. The Peasant
and the Prostitute: pg. 86, 12
sections.
Part
3. The Age of Conquest: pg. 147, 15 sections.
Part
4. Apocalypse Now: pg. 254, 20
sections.
Those 59 sections cover 367 pages of text, which
averages out to about 6 pages per chapter, and means there's always a good place to stop reading for the night.
The book covers the years from 468
CE, the year that Vandal-controlled Carthage destroyed a Roman armada trying to retake the city, to
565 CE, the year the (Eastern) Roman Emperor Justinian died. The bulk of Justinian’s Empire is
devoted to Justinian and his
“can-do-anything” military leader, Belisarius. They’re both introduced around page 100 (+/-
10 pages) and are the main focus throughout the rest of the book.
I loved the degree of detail
that author Nick Holmes imparts to this critical time in World History. The “gold coin” dilemma was solved by the
introduction of low-value copper coins called “follis”
which were so important to the daily paying of workers’ wages. I was surprised to learn of the “Late Antique Little Ice Age” in 536 CE, and
the devastating Plague in 541 CE,
both of which killed millions of people worldwide, with
civilizations having no way to defend against their effect. And I smirked when about the “Nika riots” which prove that athletic games
provoking hooligans to urban violence is nothing new.
Justinian is generally hailed
as a hero by modern historians. Nick
Holmes assesses this over the last couple of chapters, giving reasons whether
the Emperor's various military and economic campaigns were worth it in the
end. In any event, Justinian’s reign was
arguably the high-water mark of the Eastern Roman Empire. The next book reportedly focuses on the efforts
of subsequent emperors to maintain that level of glory.
Kewlest New Word ...
Slanging Match (n.) : a heated argument or
quarrel where people insult each other.
Others: Monophysites (n.).
Ratings…
Amazon:
4.5/5
based on 88 ratings and 5 reviews.
Goodreads: 4.45/5 based on 31
ratings and 3 reviews.
Excerpts...
Basilicus was a man who, over the last
1,500 years, has received not one kind word from any chronicler or
historian. He was universally detested
in the sixth century and he still is.
Indeed, it was truly remarkable that he attained the position of emperor
at all, and once he did, he did everything possible to lose it. His first foolish action was to promote the
lover of his beautiful wife, Zenonis.
Unknown to him, but known to everyone else, she was having a passionate
affair with a senator called Armatus. (pg. 44)
Chosroes marched fast into the Roman
interior. None of our sources say
whether Antioch was his aim right from the beginning. But he was certainly going in the right
direction to reach the empire’s second most important city. He avoided the city of Callinicum, where
Belisarius had suffered his only defeat, and stopped instead at the town of
Sura. Procopius says he chose Sura
because as he passed it, his horse neighed and stamped the ground, which the
magi (Persian priests) thought showed it would easily fall. But the magi made a mistake. The first Persian assault was beaten back
with heavy losses. (pg.
258)
Kindle Details…
Justinian’s
Empire presently sells for $5.99 at Amazon. Book One in the series, The Roman Revolution is on sale for just $0.99
right now, and Books 2 and 3 cost $5.99 apiece. An earlier work of the author, The Byzantine World War is available for $2.99.
“The rich Goth
wants to be Roman but only the poor Roman wants to be a Goth.” (pg. 204)
As was true in the previous
book, there is zero profanity and/or adult situations in Justinian’s Empire. One of the Empresses is mentioned as previously being a
prostitute, but I count that as a historical fact. Heck, similar situations exist in present-day
politics, and for the most part elicit yawns.
I only caught one typo. On page 106, Theodora’s “premature death” is
given as occurring in 448 CE, which is
certainly premature since that was before she was born. As the Timeline section in the back of the
book notes, the correct year is 548 CE.
The direct links to Footnotes
work very smoothly, but when Maps and Illustrations are
referenced in the text, they are not set up with active links. That was also true in the previous book.
Enough nitpicking. I found Justinian’s Empire to be another great entry in Nick Holmes’ “The Fall of
the Roman Empire” series. It
isn’t easy chronicling the events in a world that almost no one, including
me, knows much about, and do it in a coherent manner. Justinian’s Empire succeeds
wonderfully in that regard.
9 Stars. One last thing. Finding any historical records of the events covered in Justinian’s Empire apparently is quite the challenge. Nick Holmes’ favorite source is a Greek historian named Procopius, whose “official” account, titled History of the Wars, is filled with oodles of praise for Justinian, Belisarius, and their spouses, all of whom presumably loved this adulation.
But Procopius wrote a second chronicle of the same events, titled it Secret History, which presented these four characters in a much less favorable light, and which was not made public until they had all died, presumably to avoid retaliation.
Discretion truly is the better part of valor.
No comments:
Post a Comment