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The Falls of Rome
Crises, Resilience, and Resurgence in Late Antiquity

Focuses on the resilience of generations of Roman men and women, and their ability to reconstitute their city and society.

Michele Renee Salzman (Author)

9781107111424, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 9 September 2021

462 pages
23.5 x 15.9 x 3.2 cm, 0.8 kg

'[Appeals] especially to those readers interested in the political and administrative history of the late Western Roman Empire … A lengthy series of tables (60 pages) providing the names, dates, religion, and family origins/social connections of officeholders of important civic positions, such as the urban prefecture, is invaluable for historians of the period … Recommended'. R. T. Ingoglia, Choice

Over the course of the fourth through seventh centuries, Rome witnessed a succession of five significant political and military crises, including the Sack of Rome, the Vandal occupation, and the demise of the Senate. Historians have traditionally considered these crises as defining events, and thus critical to our understanding of the 'decline and fall of Rome.' In this volume, Michele Renee Salzman offers a fresh interpretation of the tumultuous events that occurred in Rome during Late Antiquity. Focusing on the resilience of successive generations of Roman men and women and their ability to reconstitute their city and society, Salzman demonstrates the central role that senatorial aristocracy played, and the limited influence of the papacy during this period. Her provocative study provides a new explanation for the longevity of Rome and its ability, not merely to survive, but even to thrive over the last three centuries of the Western Roman Empire.

1. Approaches to the fate of the Late Antique City
2. The Constantinian compromise
3. Responses to the sack of Rome in 410
4. Rome after the 455 vandal occupation
5. Why Gibbon was wrong
6. The fall of Ostrogothic Rome and the Justinianic reconstruction
7. The demise of the senate.

Subject Areas: Medieval European archaeology [HDDM], Medieval history [HBLC1], Early history: c 500 to c 1450/1500 [HBLC], Classical history / classical civilisation [HBLA1], Ancient history: to c 500 CE [HBLA]

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