Jim Swike

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In many respects, the fall of Rome involved the collapse of a city, not of a civilization. During the second century, the population of Rome approached 1 million; by the eighth century, Romans numbered fewer than fifty thousand; and by 1377, when the pope moved his court back from its captivity in Avignon, the city contained only about fifteen thousand inhabitants.
The Victory of Reason: How Christianity Led to Freedom, Capitalism, and Western Success
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