
Ravenna
Capital of Empire, Crucible of Europe
$29.08
- Paperback
576 pages
- Release Date
25 November 2021
Summary
A glorious history of the jewel-like city on the Adriatic which was a melting-pot of Greek, Latin, Christian and barbarian culture.
Winner of the 2020 Duff Cooper Prize
In 402 AD, after invading tribes broke through the Alpine frontiers of Italy and threatened the imperial government in Milan, the young Emperor Honorius made the momentous decision to move his capital to a small, easy defendable city in the Po estuary - Ravenna. From then until 751 AD, Ravenna was first the cap…
Book Details
| ISBN-13: | 9780241954454 |
|---|---|
| ISBN-10: | 0241954452 |
| Author: | Judith Herrin |
| Publisher: | Penguin Books Ltd |
| Imprint: | Penguin Books Ltd |
| Format: | Paperback |
| Number of Pages: | 576 |
| Release Date: | 25 November 2021 |
| Weight: | 443g |
| Dimensions: | 197mm x 129mm x 26mm |
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What They're Saying
Critics Review
Her magni?cent recent book Ravenna: Capital of Empire, Crucible of Europe recaptures the excitement of discovering the history of a city where East Rome and Latin Europe joined for many centuries in ways that defy our neat divisions between ancient and medieval; Romans, Greeks, and barbarians; East and West. – Peter Brown * New York Review of Books *Herrin’s claims for Ravenna are both sweeping and convincing. … Herrin’s book, then, is about a good deal more than its ostensible subject. It aims to answer some fundamental historical questions. How did the Roman empire in western Europe decay and mutate? What were the influences on the civilisation of medieval Christendom, and how did they interfuse? To what extent was Christianity touched by the trace elements of Greek and Roman civilisation? Notoriously problematic though these issues are, they are ones that Herrin has spent a distinguished career studying, and which Ravenna brilliantly serves to elucidate. – Tom Holland * Financial Times *the book is absolutely gorgeous, with magnificent colour reproductions of Ravenna’s churches and mosaics. Relics of an age that seems almost impossibly remote, they are the foundations on which modern Europe stands. – Dominic Sandbrook * Sunday Times *Beautifully illustrated, impeccably researched and accessibly presented, it traces Ravenna’s career as the capital of the Roman empire in the west … Buildings are also brought to life alongside the people who built and used them. … It is this linking of tangible remains and historical record that is the book’s great strength – Jonathan Harris * BBC History Magazine *This book is a triumph of accessible, innovative, lively scholarship from one of the very best Byzantine historians we have. It casts an unexpected but deeply illuminating light on how the “European” political and religious mind became what it is. – Rowan Williams * New Humanist *The northern Italian city of Ravenna, with its wondrous mosaicked churches and gilded mausolea that miraculously survived the aerial bombardments of the second world war, was manifestly also a Byzantine city. Herrin shows how this was so in her scrupulously researched history of the city in its imperial heyday through the period Edward Gibbon chose to call the Dark Ages … eminently worth reading. The colour plates are so sumptuous that the Ravenna mosaics fairly glow on the page. – Ian Thomson * Spectator *Judith Herrin’s Ravenna … performs the seemingly impossible task of rescuing its subject from obscurity, charting an improbably journey from marsh-enfolded outpost to imperial capital and cultural dynamo. – Philip Parker * Literary Review *Herrin tells the changing story of Ravenna as it unfolds from the end of the fourth century to the ninth in a series of short, accessible sections with the aid of luscious illustrations. – Averil Cameron * History Today *Herrin spent nine years researching her narrative of the three and a half centuries of Ravenna’s ascendancy … By the time we can easily visit Ravenna the city again it should be with the advantage of having read Ravenna the book – Christopher Howse * Daily Telegraph *lively, startling … The author evokes lost worlds in surprising anecdotes … From chariot races to bust-ups between neighbourhood gangs, readers are vividly reminded that for all its grandeur, Ravenna was in its heyday a flawed and hectic place. * Economist *
About The Author
Judith Herrin
Judith Herrin won the Heineken Prize for History (the ‘Dutch Nobel Prize’) in 2016 for her pioneering work on the early Medieval Mediterranean world, especially the role of Byzantium, the influence of Islam and the significance of women. She is the author of Byzantium- The Surprising Life of a Medieval Empire, The Formation of Christendom, A Medieval Miscellany and Women in Purple. Herrin worked in Birmingham, Paris, Munich, Istanbul and Princeton before becoming Professor of Late Antique and Byzantine Studies at King’s College London until 2008, where she is now the Constantine Leventis Visiting Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Classics. She has excavated in Greece, Cyprus and Turkey, and served for thirty years on the editorial board of Past and Present.
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