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A HISTORY OF THE EASTERN ROMAN EMPIRE FROM THE FALL OF IRENE TO THE ACCESSION OF BASIL I

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A HISTORY OF THE EASTERN ROMAN EMPIRE FROM THE FALL OF IRENE TO THE ACCESSION OF BASIL I (A.D. 802-867)

CHAPTERS

I.- Nicephorus I, Staucius, and Michael I. (A.D. 802-813)
II.- Leo V, the Armenian, and the Revival of Iconoclasm (A.D. 813-820)
III.- Michael II, the Amorian (A.D. 820-829)
IV.- Theophilus (A.D. 829-842)
V.- Michael III. (A.D. 842-867)
VI.- Photius and Ignatius
VII.- Financial and Military Administration
VIII.- The Saracen Wars
IX.- The Saracen Conquests of Crete and Sicily
X.- Relations with the Western Empire. Venice
XI.- The Bulgarian Kingdom
XII.- The Conversion of Slavs and Bulgarians
XIII.- The Empire of the Khazars and the Peoples of the North
XIV.- Art, Learning, and Education in the Amorian Period

554 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 1, 1912

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About the author

John Bagnell Bury

465 books50 followers
John Bagnell Bury (often published as J.B. Bury) was a classical scholar, historian, and philologist. He held the chair in Modern History at Trinity College, Dublin, for nine years, and also was appointed Regius Professor of Greek at Trinity, and Regius Professor of Modern History at Cambridge University.

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1,409 reviews24 followers
January 25, 2019
Bury's in-depth exploration of a 65-year period in 9th century Byzantium was published in 1912. The author's analytical skills are impressive. His prose style comes from decades before historians accepted the value of popular history, so it is a dense read. The first third of the text covers the lives and interests of the many emperors who were enthroned during this short period; the last two-thirds cover the administrative trends of the period, with a final chapter about the artistic, literary and educational aspects of the culture. If you are willing to pick through the outdated phrasing, there is a lot of meat to be found.

I was tickled by one spelling that especially dates this book: "sovereign" is spelled throughout as "sovran".

I found no bibliography in the kindle version. I don't know how recently the inclusion of a bibliography became a convention, but presumably it was after 1912.
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