Foto dell'autore

Per altri autori con il nome Jonathan Harris, vedi la pagina di disambiguazione.

9+ opere 401 membri 7 recensioni

Recensioni

Mostra 7 di 7
Easy to read history of the Byzantine Empire to its fall in 1453. This is a great starting point for the beginner to Byzantine studies.
 
Segnalato
Melisende | 1 altra recensione | Mar 2, 2017 |
Mr. Harris is of the opinion that the attack on Constantinople by the 4th Crusade was motivated by the treatment of the German contingent of the 3rd Crusade. He has assembled a good deal of evidence. This theme is further explored by Lilie in "Byzantium and the Crusader States."½
 
Segnalato
DinadansFriend | 1 altra recensione | Oct 5, 2016 |
This book proved to be a good scholarly introduction to Byzantine History. It did will in questioning some popular (Western) perceptions of the period and region, such as the notion that Byzantine Emperors were ‘untrammelled despots’ who could do what they wanted. Rather the very same people and institutions who gave him his power- most notably the church, could place limits upon it.

Furthermore, it is argued, the Byzantine Empire was not an unmitigated failure- rather it left behind a strong cultural legacy, in which many areas and peoples of Europe were Christianized (including Russia), preserved precious works from the classical age. Ultimately, it is concluded, that the ‘real strength’ of the Byzantines was to create a long-lasting society which was able adapt to circumstances as well as incorporate disparate peoples.

That said, as another reviewer pointed out that aspects of the book may not appeal people of Greek and Greek Orthodox background today, who tend to be the group most interested in the Byzantines (for obvious reasons). I did feel there was an element of modern judgement, especially applied to the early period of the study, and even some failure to question popular myths, for instance the political circumstances that may have resulted in the death of the famous scholar Hypatia. I don’t believe this was all about religion at all.

Yet later on, we are told that the Turks, and especially the Ottomans, supposedly the oldest and most implacable enemies of Byzantium were not really religiously motivated (yet supposedly those who killed Hypatia, and attacked pagans in the sixth and seventh century usually were). This apparent dichotomy- to consider the political or pragmatic reasoning that may have motivated the actions of one group, but fail to do so for another, is something which some readers may find troubling.

Overall, although this was an interesting work, I would not read it alone. I have another couple of books on the Byzantines, and would consider reading them to get the bigger picture. Readers may wish to be warned, it very much represents the traditional ‘top down’ approach to history, focusing on leaders and battles. So do not be deceived by the title- it is not a social history of the Byzantine world.

I received an E-book version of this title free from the Publisher via Netgalley for the purposes of review. I was not required to write a positive one and all opinions expressed are entirely my own.
 
Segnalato
Medievalgirl | 2 altre recensioni | Oct 4, 2016 |
this is an anthology of Articles relating to the complexity of the Eastern Mediterranean world after the Fourth Crusade. But there is not much narrative strength in the work. The articles are lacking much of a common theme and are best viewed as stages in the production of longer, more connected works. So there is not much here for the general reader, only for those seeking to establish the areas of controversy in the current field, and to attach names to the factions. The most entertaining piece is "Aragon versus Turkey" an attempt to discern the historical background to a Catalan Novel "Tirant Lo Blanc" set in the period of the Anthology. This is the Abulafia contribution
 
Segnalato
DinadansFriend | Oct 3, 2016 |
Although this book is comprehensive on the sequence of emperors, the gain and loss of territory, formation and breaking of alliances, etc. it has little to say about the lives of the people involved. This is almost strictly a political history, with some mention of religion necessary to explain the schism with the Latin West and the problems with Islam. Dry.
 
Segnalato
ritaer | 2 altre recensioni | Jul 5, 2016 |
A fascinating account of the rise and fall of Byzantine, its people, its faith and art.
It tells of the historical influences Europeans, Turks, Greeks and Romans had on Constantinople.
The illustrative map diagrams show in great detail the spread of these peoples throughout the city and general area.
A great read!
I received a digital copy from the publisher via NetGalley in return for an honest unbiased review.
 
Segnalato
Welsh_eileen2 | 2 altre recensioni | Jan 23, 2016 |
A good general narrative of the last few generations of the Byzantine polity, with particular emphasis on how external relations with the Italian states that dominated trade and Byzantium's status as a tributory of the Ottomans impacted the conflicts within the ruling house of the Palaiologoi.½
 
Segnalato
Shrike58 | Feb 28, 2012 |
Mostra 7 di 7