One of the most enduring problems of history is the decline of
Classical Civilization. How was it that the civilization of Greece
and Rome, which had endured almost a thousand years, a civilization
which prized learning, science and reason, gave way to the world of
the Medieval; an age which saw, for a while, the almost complete
disappearance of the rationalist spirit of Greece and Rome? The
traditional view was that after their seizure of Italy in the fifth
century, the Barbarian tribes of Germany and Scythia had reduced
Europe to an economic and cultural wasteland, initiating a Dark
Age, which was to last half a millennium. After the Reformation,
another suspect was added to the list: Christianity, or, more
accurately, Catholic Christianity. In this view Christianity was
corrupted beyond recognition after the time of Constantine and from
the fourth century onwards a power-hungry Church hierarchy, in
cahoots with the Imperial authorities, kept the population of
Europe in subservience and ignorance, effectively completing the
destructive work of the Barbarians.
In this ground-breaking work, historian John J. O'Neill examines
a great variety of evidence from many specialties and reaches an
astonishing and novel conclusion: Classical Civilization was not
destroyed by Barbarians or by Christians. It survived intact into
the early seventh century. The Vandals and Goths who seized the
Western Empire in the fifth century had become completely romanized
by the start of the sixth century. Artistic and intellectual life
flourished, as did the economy and the cities built earlier under
the Empire. Yet sometime in the middle of the seventh century
everything changed. Cities were abandoned, literacy plummeted,
royal authority declined and local strongmen, or barons, seized
control of the provinces. The Middle Ages had begun.
Who or what had caused this? As O'Neill notes, by the 1920s
Belgian historian Henri Pirenne had located the proverbial smoking
gun; but it was not in the hands of the Barbarians or the
Christians: it was held by those who, even then, it had become
fashionable to credit with saving, rather than destroying,
Classical Civilization: the Arabs. In a conclusion that will have
resonance for the modern world, O'Neill argues convincingly that
all we regard as Medieval had its origin in Islam, and that the
Muslims terminated Classical Civilization in Europe just as surely
as they did in the Middle East. O'Neill shows how the sudden
relapse of Europe in the seventh century was due entirely to the
economic blockade imposed by Islam's war against Christendom. The
Mediterranean, which had previously been a cultural highway, now
became a frontier, and a very dangerous frontier at it. Prompted by
Islam's doctrine of perpetual war against nonbelievers, Muslim
pirates scoured the Mediterranean, effectively ending all trade
between Europe and the great centers of civilization in the Near
East. The flow of gold ended, as did the supply of all luxury
items. And so too did the supply of papyrus from Egypt, without
which Europeans were forced to rely on expensive parchment. Not
surprisingly, literacy plummeted. Worst of all, the great cities of
the West, which depended upon the trade in luxury items from the
East, began to decline.
As the dominant power of the time, ideas originating in the
Islamic world now began to penetrate Europe. From their Muslim foes
Christian Europeans began to think in terms that would have been
unimaginable a century earlier. The idea of Holy War entered the
mindset of Christians, and, under the influence of Islam, the
rationalism of Greece and Rome began to be replaced by a literal
and intolerant interpretation of The Book. Classical civilization
was dead.
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