428 AD: An Ordinary Year at the End of the Roman Empire

by Giusto Traina

Hardcover, 2009

Status

Available

Call number

937.09

Collections

Publication

Princeton University Press (2009), Edition: First Edition, 232 pages

Description

This is a sweeping tour of the Mediterranean world from the Atlantic to Persia during the last half-century of the Roman Empire. By focusing on a single year not overshadowed by an epochal event, 428 AD provides a truly fresh look at a civilization in the midst of enormous change--as Christianity takes hold in rural areas across the empire, as western Roman provinces fall away from those in the Byzantine east, and as power shifts from Rome to Constantinople. Taking readers on a journey through the region, Giusto Traina describes the empires' people, places, and events in all their simultaneous richness and variety. The result is an original snapshot of a fraying Roman world on the edge of the medieval era. The result is an original snapshot of a fraying Roman world on the edge of the medieval era. Readers meet many important figures, including the Roman general Flavius Dionysius as he encounters a delegation from Persia after the Sassanids annex Armenia; the Christian ascetic Simeon Stylites as he stands and preaches atop his column near Antioch; the eastern Roman emperor Theodosius II as he prepares to commission his legal code; and Genseric as he is elected king of the Vandals and begins to turn his people into a formidable power. We are also introduced to Pulcheria, the powerful sister of Theodosius, and Galla Placidia, the queen mother of the western empire, as well as Augustine, Pope Celestine I, and nine-year-old Roman emperor Valentinian III. Full of telling details, 428 AD illustrates the uneven march of history. As the west unravels, the east remains intact. As Christianity spreads, pagan ideas and schools persist. And, despite the presence of the forces that will eventually tear the classical world apart, Rome remains at the center, exerting a powerful unifying force over disparate peoples stretched across the Mediterranean.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member agingcow2345
An excellent survey of 5th Century Rome taking a particular year for which we have records from most of the major provinces. Would have preferred 405-406 but my personal focus is military-political history so the breach of the Rhine frontier and the collapse of Gaul and Germania is of great
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interest to me.
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LibraryThing member hailelib
428 AD : An Ordinary Year at the End of the Roman Empire is a short but dense book that tries to be a snapshot of the Empire at a time between antiquity and the medieval age. There is still an Empire, although the East and West are separating, Christianity is spreading and is now a dominant
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religion supported by the ruling families, and Constantinople is now a very powerful city politically and one whose bishop is also very influential in directing the course that the Church will take over the next decades. I think Traina was largely successful in this little book but there are a lot of people and events to keep track of and the book is as much about the history of Christianity as it is about the political conflicts of the time.

Recommended for those really interested in Late Antiquity.
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LibraryThing member DinadansFriend
Traina takes the reader on a tour around the Mediterranean basin, starting with Armenia, and ending with a look at the state of the Sassanian Empire. He chose 428 for that was the year that the Sassanians swallowed the long-standing armenian client state while the Romans were involved with trying
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to re-unify their state. The book does the reader a service by placing some individuals and trends usually studied in isolation, in a more direct chronological relationship to each other. It is a refreshing approach, that shows the complexities of the situation of the Mediterranean peoples as they tried to maintain their civilization in the face of myriad pressures.
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Language

Original language

English

Original publication date

2009-09-03 (1e traduction et édition française, Histoire, Les Belles lettres)

Physical description

232 p.; 6.5 inches

ISBN

0691136696 / 9780691136691

Barcode

91100000179306

DDC/MDS

937.09
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