BYZANTIUM: THE SURPRISING LIFE OF A MEDIEVAL EMPIRE.

the surprising life of a medieval empire

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Judith Herrin, Judith Herrin: BYZANTIUM: THE SURPRISING LIFE OF A MEDIEVAL EMPIRE. (Undetermined language, 2007, ALLEN LANE)

391 pages

Undetermined language

Published June 16, 2007 by ALLEN LANE.

ISBN:
978-0-7139-9997-6
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(6 reviews)

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Review of 'BYZANTIUM: THE SURPRISING LIFE OF A MEDIEVAL EMPIRE.' on 'Goodreads'

7/10

I don't have a lot of experience with history books so I'm not sure what qualities to look for in one nor the standards. I thus can only write about how I personally found it and my time with it. Byzantium, written as it is for the public (rather than historians), does a good job of laying out all the interesting bits of it's subject on the canvas; sometimes in broad strokes and sometimes in intimate details. The mostly self contained chapters, each around a single feature of the society make it very approachable each pages never failing to contain something interesting.

The Byzantines themselves make for an interesting tale, them having previously been mostly a mystery to me. The history of the Churches and how they came to take the shape they have today. How the familiar court and royal traditions of Europe came about from their Roman …

Review of 'BYZANTIUM: THE SURPRISING LIFE OF A MEDIEVAL EMPIRE.' on 'Goodreads'

Considering that Byzantine history lasts for a thousand years, I think it was really smart to not try to tell a chronological story but to explore different aspects of Byzantine culture in individual chapters. If you're looking for a narrative history, this isn't it, but if you want a good overview of Byzantine culture and its influence on the world, this book is excellent.

None

Several years ago I had the opportunity of completing a History Honours degree that I had had to leave unfinished because of lack of funds. I had to choose three papers out of several on offer, and one of them was Medieval History. I asked the professor what it covered. "Diplomatic and political history of England, France and Germany," he told me. I lost interest, and enrolled for courses on other places and periods.

The syllabus illustrates the prejudice among Western historians, from the Renaissance to the present, that Judith Herrin's book attempts to counter. Perhaps it was just as well that I was put off from taking the course on Medieval history, because this book was not available back then, and so even if the course had covered the so-called Byzantine Empire, I would have lacked an important resource for understanding it.

The term "Byzantine Empire" is itself an …

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Subjects

  • Byzantine Empire -- History.
  • Byzantine Empire -- Civilization.