John Julius Norwich Narrates Byzantium's Early Centuries, From The Age Of Constantine The Great To The Reign Of The Empress Irene.
The Byzantine Empire possesses a magnificent, eleven-hundred-year legacy of such scale that many scholars & historians devote their entire lives towards the study of but small periods of it, due to the staggering number of princes, potentates, large-scale battles, faction struggles & civil wars which dominate the eastern Roman empire's history. At the height of its power, the empire was comprised of a monolithic sovereign state which spanned all of Asia Minor & a sizeable portion of the eastern & western Mediterranean regions including North Africa, South Italy & Sicily, the Greek Islands & the Baltic Peninsula. These regions were assimilated into the empire by renowned imperial generals such as Belisarius, whose rivalry with the emperor Justinian was as legendary as his exploits on the battlefield, & Narses the Armenian, the deciding factor which won the Gothic War & established a Byzantine presence in Italy that pervaded for centuries.
The line of emperors appearing in the early Byzantine succession are as varied & cosmopolitan as the empire itself, & their ranks can boast such diverse historical figures as Constantine I the Great, who is considered Byzantium's progenitor due to his decision to migrate the imperial capital from Rome to Constantinople, the Macedonian-born emperor Justinian I & his wife, the empress Theodora, whose ambitious building programmes led to Byzantium's gaining its reputation for stunning, period architecture such as the Church of St. Sophia, now called the Hagia Sophia in Istanbul, Turkey, & the oft-misunderstood Empress Irene, whose controversial iconodule policies temporarily reversed the harsh iconoclast edicts of her husband, Leo IV, that had led to the senseless destruction of thousands of pieces of priceless religious artwork & artifacts of worship across the empire.
This cloth-bound, hardcover edition of John Juilus Norwich's Byzantium: The Early Centuries, is volume I in his historic Byzantium trilogy & is published by the London-based Folio Society, a premium book manufacturer which specializes in deluxe, high-quality collector's editions from all literary genres. The book is printed on Caxton wove paper & is part of a boxed set, featuring fifty-five full color photographs of Byzantine art & architecture which are exclusive to this Folio edition. There are also maps of Constantinople, Italy, Asia Minor & the Middle East, The Balkan Peninsula & The Mediterranean World, in addition to The Family Trees of Diocletian, Constantine the Great, Valentinian & Theodosius, The Families of Leo I & Leo III, The Families of Justinian & Theodoric, The Family of Tiberius Constantine, finally, The Family of Heraclius. There is a list of Byzantine emperors from 284-814 AD, a list of locations & monuments in Istanbul, Turkey which the author recommends visiting, & a six-page bibliography of reference material.
The introduction to John Julius Norwich's Byzantium: The Early Centuries begins with a rather startling excerpt from William Edward Hartpole Lecky's 1869 History of European Morals, which outlines in acute detail a number of the Byzantine empire's faults & shortcomings, followed by Norwich's brief description of his own scant exposure to Byzantium growing up in England -- "During my five years at one of England's oldest & finest public schools, Byzantium seems to have been the victim of a conspiracy of silence. I cannot honestly remember it being mentioned, far less studied; & so complete was my ignorance that I should have been hard put to define it in even general terms until I went to Oxford. Many people, I suspect, feel similarly vague today; & it is for them, above all, that this book has been written."
Later in the introduction he reminisces on a similarly themed conversation he had with a friend -- "What, you may ask, ever induced me to take on so formidable an assignment? In fact the idea originated not with me at all but with my friend Bob Gottlieb, some time before he left my American publishers to edit the New Yorker, & though I remember feeling a little daunted by the magnitude of the task he suggested, I do not think there was any real hesitation." No other empire on Earth can boast a legacy that combines the culture & learning of ancient Greece with the civil engineering & military prowess of the SPQR, & with the Byzantium trilogy, Norwich has completed what will likely be considered the magnum opus of his prestigious writing career. Each volume in the saga covers a span of centuries in the storied history of Byzantium, with this first entry beginning during the empire's prehistory in 284 AD & continuing all the way up to the ascent of Charlemagne, whose reign lasted through the period of the Greek empress Irene's rule, ending with his death in 814.
The story begins in Chapter 1, Constantine the Great, where in the year 285, the Roman emperor Diocletian makes the earth-shattering decision to divide his vast empire into what became known as the Tetrarchy, promoting his old general Maximian to the rank of Augustus & raising two more lieutenants, Galerius & Constantius Chlorus, to the rank of Caesar. Chlorus's son, the future Constantine the Great, quickly becomes Diocletian's most trusted battle commander, & he accompanies his lord on military campaigns in Egypt & against the Persians in 295 & 298, respectively, but Diocletian comes to another momentous impasse when he voluntarily relinquishes his authority after twenty years in power. One of Norwich's stellar notes inform the reader that, after receiving a letter from the now ex-Augustus Maximian imploring him to once again rule the empire, the humble Diocletian demurs, with the noted English historian Edward Gibbon writing of him, "he rejected the temptation with a smile of pity, calmly observing that, if he could show Maximian the cabbages which he had planted with his own hands at Salona, he should no longer be urged to relinquish the enjoyment of happiness for the pursuit of power."
In Chapter 2, The Adoption of the Faith: 323-6, over the next decade Constantine fought a series of wars against the remnants of Diocletian's Tetrarchy, defeating rebels & imperial usurpers in a number of pitched battles which included the famous clash with Maximian's son Maxentius at the Milvian Bridge in 312, the very spot where Constantine witnessed his now-legendary vision that led him to embrace Christianity during the battle. This was followed by the emergence within the Christian Church of a series of movements deemed by the ecclesiastical hierarchy as schismatic, most notably a faction of Christians who followed the teachings of an Alexandrian preacher, Arius, whose doctrine eventually became known as Arianism. The Arians practiced a fundamentally different set of beliefs than their Christian counterparts, which involved the way they worshiped Jesus Christ in relation to other members of the Holy Trinity.
Norwich also covers the monumental shift of the empire's capital city from Rome to Byzantium, a process which literally took decades before it was finally complete. In Chapter 3, Constantinople: 326-337, during the year 326, when Constantine the Great was planning the expansive layout of his new imperial capital, he was said to have used the tip of his spear to trace the outline of where he wanted its future walls to fall, & when those accompanying him expressed their surprise at how grand his vision was, he merely replied, "I shall continue until he who walks ahead of me bids me to stop." The author's attention to detail in the entire Byzantium saga is nothing short of remarkable; throughout the main text the reader will run across a myriad of stylishly chosen quotations from old histories & the musings of scholars, both ancient & modern, which add immeasurably to the tone & atmosphere -- with a John Julius Norwich book, the audience is treated to the very best the history genre has to offer.
In the wake of Constantine's death in 337, there erupted a fierce war of succession for control of the empire, as his three sons -- Constantine II, Constantius & Constans, all vied for the imperial throne. In all there were five family members to whom Constantine the Great had bestowed the rank of Caesar, the remaining two being his half-brothers Julius Constantius & Dalmetius, but in the chaos after his funeral there was a note planted in the deceased emperor's hand stating that his siblings had had him poisoned, most likely a stratagem of Constantine II, & the half-brothers & their families were eliminated as rivals, leaving only two young children, Gallus, & Julian, who later became 'the Apostate'. Adding to this volatile state of affairs, at a banquet thrown at Augustodunum in 340 by one of Constans's ministers there had arisen a would-be usurper, Magnentius, who was not defeated until 351, at the Battle of Mursa. Norwich has aided his readers immeasurably by inserting & bracketing the year at the top of every other page.
The Roman emperor Julian's reign as Caesar & Augustus is Norwich's primary topic in Chapter 4, Julian the Apostate: 337-363. After receiving an ill omen foretelling his downfall, Constantius dies of a fever in the city of Tarsus, in modern-day Turkey, which leaves Julian in sole charge of the entire Roman empire. Once in power Julian sets into motion a number of important reforms, which included increasing the power of the senate & a revamping of the cursus publicus, the public transport system for administrative personnel & imperial freight. The author utilizes material from an interesting group of sources for this chapter, including the Greek sophist Libenius' Orations & the Roman soldier-turned-historian Ammianus Marcellinus's The Later Roman Empire. Julian was also a capable general in the field, & during his reign as Caesar he distinguished himself fighting against the Franks & Germanic tribes on the Rhine River, & as sole emperor he began a campaign against the Persian Sassanid empire & its fearsome king, Shapur & it is during this expedition that he meets his end at the Battle of Ctesiphon after being mortally wounded by an enemy spear. Among Julian's most famous acts was his renunciation of Christianity & return to the old Roman pagan religion, & this chapter is prefaced with an excerpt from his Hymn to Cybele, Mother of the Gods.
The father of the future emperor, Theodosius the Great, had achieved distinction fighting the Picts & Scots in Roman Britain during the joint reigns of Valentinian & Valens, & it was only matter of time until the son received his own opportunity to shine during the reign of their successor, Gratian, in 383, which was a year that also saw Gratian's untimely murder at a fateful banquet in Lyons, under a banner of truce. Theodosius himself was an unassuming man, lacking decadence & frivolity, humble & considerate. Norwich provides an excellent description of him in Chapter 5, The Empire at Bay: 363-395 -- "In all the years that he had wielded the supreme power, he had never impressed his Empire -- as Julian had done in a fraction of the time - with the stamp of a huge & dominating personality. On the contrary, he had been quiet, cautious almost to a fault, & totally without flamboyance. Readers of this brief account of his career may well find themselves wondering, not so much whether he deserved the title of 'the Great' as how he ever came to acquire it in the first place." Later in the passage he extols some of this most underrated of Roman emperors' accomplishments -- "In his civil legislation he showed, again & again, a consideration for the humblest of his subjects that was rare indeed among rulers of the fourth century. What other prince would have decreed that any criminal, sentenced to execution, imprisonment or exile, must be first allowed thirty days' grace to put his affairs in order?...Or that no farmer should be obliged to sell his produce to the state at a price lower than he would receive on the open market?"
In Chapter 9, The Rise of Justinian: 493-532, according to a legend, the emperor Justin I came to power in a chance occurrence during the reign of Anastasius I Dicorus, after the reigning emperor, when determining who would inherit his empire, had decided to hide a slip of paper upon which was written the word, 'regnum', under the cushions of one of three couches in his antechamber, & he then summoned his three nephews to see which of them sat on the divan. As it turned out, two of them tried to sit on the same couch, so Anastatius took this as a sign that the next emperor would not be of his line. The next person to enter his chambers was Justin, his comes excubitorum (commander of the excubitors), & this the emperor interpreted as an omen from God. In the unsuspecting Justin the elderly Anastasius had finally found his next heir. Another accounting attributes Justin's rise to the political machinations of his nephew, Petrus Sabbatius, who later took the now-famous name of Justinian I, in homage to his uncle. As emperor, Justin did much to heal the wounds between the Eastern & Western branches of Christianity, & although his education was limited, his nephew greatly assisted him in matters of politics & statecraft.
Norwich characterizes the first five years of Justinian's reign with the rise of confidence men such as John of Cappadocia, a civic official who eventually became a Praetorian Prefect & excelled in the art of tax collection, & according to the Byzantine administrator & scribe John of Lydia, he introduced twenty-six new taxes & staunchly fought against corruption, also greatly reducing the power within the government of the senior provincial office-holders. Tribonian was another key individual in Justinian's administration, & he assisted the emperor in the monumental task of completely rewriting Roman law by streamlining & more closely aligning it with Christian doctrine. In 529 Tribonian published the finished version of the Codex, followed by another in 533, the Digest, this one of jurists' writings amounting to fifty books of material. Justinian's The Digest of Roman Law is available from Penguin Classics.
Chapter 17, The First Iconoclasts: 711-775 chronicles the dubious reigns of the two Byzantine emperors, Leo III the Isaurian, & his son, Constantine V 'Copronymus', whose most enduring legacy was their senseless destruction of thousands of Christian idols, artwork & relics throughout the empire. Iconoclasm is literally defined as, 'the smashing of icons'. Leo III began life as a peasant living in Germanica, an old Roman village that the emperor Justinian II, in one of his population migrations, had relocated to Thrace, & he had attracted the emperor's attention in 705 while Justinian was marching on Constantinople with his vast army. His skills & his ambition impressed his benefactor, & eventually he rose to become strategos, or imperial governor, of the Theme of Anatolikon. Leo was quickly confronted with a Saracen invasion led by the Muslim generals Maslama & Suleiman, & while it is somewhat unclear what actually transpired, some historians believe that Leo entered into some sort of secret agreement with the Arab commanders & persuaded them to call off their invasion. He then allies himself with Artabasdus, strategos of the Armeniakon, & unbelievably, he usurps the imperial throne by forcing the reigning emperor, Theodosius III, into abdication.
The Saracen generals make their return, however, this time raising the stakes in an all-out siege of the Byzantine capital, but the crafty Leo yet again insinuates his way into their trust, & consequently, double-crosses them at every turn. Starvation, disease & Greek fire all took their toll on the Saracen invaders, however, the Byzantine defenders were reinforced by a large Bulgarian army, which inflicted 22,000 casualties & effectively ended the siege in a disastrous turn of events for Maslama's forces. Norwich narrates the aftermath of Leo's triumph -- "As for the emperor himself, he had amply justified his bid for power. He had, moreover, made a considerably larger contribution to his subjects' deliverance than most of them ever knew. As near-contemporary Arab accounts make clear, he had been in touch with Maslama & Suleiman from the start, making them endless promises that he had no intention of keeping & offering them copious advice that he knew would prove disastrous." Norwich transforms each major Byzantine emperor's reign into its own harrowing microhistory; each emperor's story is wonderfully unique, & the author manages to make all of them stand out in grandiose fashion.
In closing, John Julius Norwich's Byzantium: The Early Centuries has everything a reader could possibly want in an historical narrative -- a complex, nuanced plotline, literally dozens of colorful, one-of-a-kind characters, treacherous conspiracies, epic, high-stakes battles -- everything about this first entry bespeaks the work of a master historian. The volume has not so much been written as it has been crafted, by the accomplished hand of a literary artisan at the apex of his profession. Near the end of the book, in the closing passages of Chapter 18, Irene: 775-802, Norwich sums up in admirable fashion this first great period of Byzantine history, emphasizing the unprecedented cultural & municipal growth of Constantinople, & the resourceful, energetic people of the empire, who made the experience of learning about this magnificent historical period all the more worthwhile, both as a reader & a reviewer:
"Four hundred & seventy-two years had elapsed since that spring morning when Constantine the Great had inaugurated his New Rome at the mouth of the Bosphorus - a period of time approximately equal to that which separates us from the Reformation - during which both the Roman Empire & the city which lay at its heart had changed beyond recognition. The Empire itself was much diminished: Syra & Palestine, Egypt & North Africa & Spain had all been engulfed by the Muslim tide, while Central Italy had fallen first to the Lombards & then to the Franks, who had passed it on in their turn to the Pope. Constantinople itself, on the other hand, had grown dramatically, & was by now incontestably the largest city, as well as the richest & most sumptuous, in the world." Thank you so very much for reading, I hope you enjoyed the review!