The Story of Civilization 4: The Age of Faith

by Will Durant

Hardcover, 1970

Status

Available

Call number

909

Collection

Publication

Simon & Schuster (1970), Hardcover, 1200 pages

Description

Surveys the medieval achievements and modern significance of Christian, Islamic, and Judaic life and culture. Like the other volumes in the series, this is a self-contained work that also fits into a comprehensive history of mankind. It includes the dramatic stories of St. Augustine, Charlemagne, William the Conqueror, Eleanor of Aquitaine, Richard the Lionheart, Saladin, Maimonides, St. Francis, St. Thomas Aquinas, Roger Bacon, and many others.

User reviews

LibraryThing member AlexTheHunn
Durant devotes this volume to the Dark Ages. He begins with Constantine's conversion and ends with the first flickers of the Italian Renaissance. Along the way, barbarians arise, Rome falls, Charlemagne appears, Thomas Aquinas writes. Durant manages to compress a vast amount of information into his
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book. His writing always pleases.
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LibraryThing member bookcoll
The Durants seem to have been very unbiased historians with the ability to see the irony and the unintentional humor in human history from the ancient through the Napoleonic years. I have already read all the volumes twice and fully hope to read them again.
LibraryThing member Hae-Yu
Although I took forever reading this book, it was enjoyable and provided a wealth of information of the time and subject. The author approaches individuals and movements with a balanced perspective. In one chapter, Durant can be snobbishly critical while 10 chapters later entirely sympathetic. Of
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particular note, I liked learning the etymology of everyday terms - banker, sterling, wedding, testimony, among many others.
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LibraryThing member MarcusBastos
The Middle Age and the West Civilization in the Making
The fourth volume of Will Durant's Story of Civilization covers the Middle Age, with special attention to the Catholic Church and the development of the European States. The narrative flows well except for some war passages. Durant succeeds in
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pointing the main facts and moments of the Age, a formative period in West Civilization (I'm glad to see that the Author doesn't share the idea that this was a "dark period"). A book worth reading (listening)!
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LibraryThing member Jiraiya
I began reading this book in January the 10th 0f 2021 and finished reading it on the 13th of April of the same year. This means that I blitzed my way through this book. For you see, this book was enormous, both in its physicality and its scope.

There is only one book above 1000 pages of my knowledge
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that has FUN stamped all over it in each page, and that book, is not LoTR. LoTR doesn't count because it is not a genuinely single work.

Back to The Age of Faith. The words in it are meant to be absorbed over a longer time than it took me. I hurried my way through it, but if it worked for The Way of Kings, it ought to be good enough for any chunky book. By the way The Way of Kings is that book that is perfect in each of its page. Until a reread dethrones it that is. Been having awful rereads recently.

I was most interested in England, France, Ireland, Italy and the Middle East mainly. I kind of got my answer to the age old question as to why the Italians are so refined in their culture but also are so Mesozoic in some of their ways. By the way, I've followed a few recipes from top chefs based in Italy and I came away with the feeling that I was being punked. Italian cooking is marginally inferior to English cooking. Just my opinion.

What I take from the Age of Faith is that history is different from popular culture. I was always bummed by the adage of calling our worldview theory... postmodernism. In fact we're proud of this word. This book made me realise how myopic so many current theologians, tech gurus, sociologists, historians and journalists are. News Flash people! we are never going to be postmodernists. That will happen when and only when people are enlightened enough when they expect a G7 summit gathering dress up their leaders in what I wear around the house. Boxer shorts and wife beater.
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LibraryThing member DinadansFriend
This is a long book, but it covers the longest period dealt with by the Durant writing team, except for the extremely cursory Volume one "Our Oriental Heritage." From Constantine I to the period of Dante, we get an overview of the culture evolved by western Europe, and the Islamic world with
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coverage of the formal philosophies of the period. There are a goodly number of insightful aphorisms, and consistent chronology, and the book gives the general reader an adequate place to start when pursing more detailed enquiries. I still, after a half century, consult it.
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LibraryThing member mattries37315
The death of two men bookends the Middle Ages, one transformed the Roman Empire by injecting Christianity into the government and the other was the man who ended the reign of Latin in the literature of Italy to produce the greatest of medieval Christian books. The Age of Faith is the fourth volume
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of Will Durant’s The Story of Civilization series focusing on the end of the Western Roman Empire, the rise of Christian Europe, the zenith and slow decline of Byzantium, the birth and stagnation of Islamic civilization, and the continued resilience of Jewish faith and culture.

Unlike the previous volumes of the series, Durant does not need a prologue to introduce anything as the volume beings where the ends the death of Constantine. Over the course of a millennium from the death of the first Christian emperor to the death of Dante the champion of vernacular Italian and champion of the dream of a unified Italy. For Durant this millennium isn’t all about Christianity, but the rise and continuation of the Abrahamic religions so the rise of Islam and the blooming of Islamic civilization as well as the continuation of Judaism are significant portions of the volume and whose contributions would be interwoven into the medieval fabric in the 12th and 13th centuries. However, three-quarters of the volume shows how Christianity fought against, preserved, and built upon the classical heritage of Greece and Roman to form medieval Christendom in culture, science, art, and political theories. Yet, as with previous volumes Durant’s word usage can be problematic though as well as distaste for religion when comparing/contrasting it to philosophy even though he praises the sincerity of those that live their faith while showing the twists and turns of theological development that intertwined what those in power thought was orthodoxy in opposition to those who thought differently. Durant demonstrates that modern Europe is essentially still medieval either as it’s extension of classic antiquity that would birth the Renaissance or it’s civilized barbarity that would bring about a Reformation.

The Age of Faith was a millennium of decline, rebirth, preservation, innovation, of change and stability that was needed in Will Durant’s view before the coming of an “age of reason” that would bring about modernity.
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Awards

Language

Original publication date

1950

Physical description

1200 p.; 9.5 inches

ISBN

0671012002 / 9780671012007

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