In this bold approach to late antiquity, Garth Fowden shows how,
from the second-century peak of Rome's prosperity to the
ninth-century onset of the Islamic Empire's decline, powerful
beliefs in One God were used to justify and strengthen "world
empires." But tensions between orthodoxy and heresy that were
inherent in monotheism broke the unitary empires of Byzantium and
Baghdad into the looser, more pluralistic commonwealths of Eastern
Christendom and Islam. With rare breadth of vision, Fowden traces
this transition from empire to commonwealth, and in the process
exposes the sources of major cultural contours that still play a
determining role in Europe and southwest Asia.
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