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Decline & Fall of the Roman Empire…
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Decline & Fall of the Roman Empire (Wordsworth Classics of World Literature) (original 1998; edition 1999)

by Edward Gibbon

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349373,893 (3.95)None
Gibbon's work, although very lengthy, is very relevant to the study of the Roman Empire. He looks primarily as to why it failed to continue over the centuries -- thus the title. But it really is worth the time reading. Any historian, whether a novice or a decorated professor, can tell you the value of this work. ( )
  philae_02 | Jul 13, 2013 |
Showing 3 of 3
An absolutely massive work, served up in a less forbidding shape in this edition, which has 28 in full of the book's 71 chapters (the omitted chapters, however, are served up in one-page summaries, so you at least get a feel of what you're missing). We are used to thinking of the Roman Empire in positive, even superlative, terms, but here the accent is on its weaknesses and failures. One gets the impression of a regime that depended too much on mercenary armed forces, who seem to have continually blackmailed the rulers; and of an inordinately self-serving ruling class, with rare exceptions like Marcus Aurelius or Trajan in the early years, and the chronic problem of an orderly succession, which seems to have been as traumatic and blood-soaked as in the Turco-Mongol world. The story is also that of the gradual ascendancy of Christianity, and its usurpation of the state apparatus. Little importance seems to have been given to the state-building prowess, the massive infrastructure, the Pax Romana which is touted as a gift to humanity. The story of the fall of Constantinople is especially heart-wrenching. The breadth and depth of the author's scholarship is mind-blowing.
For our era, Gibbon's work serves as a warning against depending too much on the armed forces to maintain the state; and the relative weakness of a state religion based on astrology, superstition,and the divine right of kings. ( )
  Dilip-Kumar | Mar 16, 2023 |
Gibbon's work, although very lengthy, is very relevant to the study of the Roman Empire. He looks primarily as to why it failed to continue over the centuries -- thus the title. But it really is worth the time reading. Any historian, whether a novice or a decorated professor, can tell you the value of this work. ( )
  philae_02 | Jul 13, 2013 |
Showing 3 of 3

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