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The Early Byzantine Historians is the first original study of every
significant Byzantine historian from Eusebius of Caesarea
(c.255-339) to Theophylact Simocatta (c.585-after 641). Written for
general readers as well as professional scholars, and filled with
new discoveries and interpretations, the book presents a remarkable
portrait gallery of forty historians who were gifted writers,
incisive thinkers, engaging personalities, or all three at once.
Individually and as a group, these authors had a decisive influence
on Byzantine culture and modern perceptions of Byzantine history.
The Middle Byzantine Historians, which continues the same author's
Early Byzantine Historians, is the first book to analyze the lives
and works of every significant Byzantine historian from the seventh
to the thirteenth century. Written for general readers as well as
professional scholars, it describes forty-three historians who
usually knew their emperors personally. Besides obscure but
intriguing figures like the exiled Sergius Confessor, father of the
Patriarch Photius, and the embittered monk Nicetas the
Paphlagonian, author of a Secret History that denounced Photius,
the historians include the authors of three of the world's greatest
histories: the courtier Michael Psellus, who depicts the flawed
personalities of the fourteen emperors and empresses of his time,
Princess Anna Comnena, who makes a spirited defense of her father
Alexius I, and Nicetas Choniates, a provincial who rose to head the
whole Byzantine bureaucracy and told the story of his empire's
decline from great power to destruction by the Fourth Crusade.
Originally published in 1955, this is an illuminating study of the
political thought and action of the Russian intelligentsia, in the
decade up to and including the Revolution of 1905-6. It is based on
the writings, including those in the revolutionary press, by which
the chief figures of the main opposition parties expressed their
political theory, strategy and tactics and related them to the
turbulent events of those years. It is also based on personal
interviews with some of the survivors of these political struggles.
The book is focused on the emergence, starting in 1889 of the major
political parties in Russia and it tells of their efforts to form a
common front against Tsarism in the revolution which they
confidently expected in the early years of the century.
Originally published in 1955, this is an illuminating study of the
political thought and action of the Russian intelligentsia, in the
decade up to and including the Revolution of 1905-6. It is based on
the writings, including those in the revolutionary press, by which
the chief figures of the main opposition parties expressed their
political theory, strategy and tactics and related them to the
turbulent events of those years. It is also based on personal
interviews with some of the survivors of these political struggles.
The book is focused on the emergence, starting in 1889 of the major
political parties in Russia and it tells of their efforts to form a
common front against Tsarism in the revolution which they
confidently expected in the early years of the century.
A worldwide trend toward democracy is surely one of the more
remarkable phenomena of our times, even if the movement twoard that
goal may often be haphazard and elusive. Past history will provide
a healthy skepticism concerning the likelihood of democracy being
reached in the near future in many parts of the world, as well as a
preparedness for the possibility that many countries apparently
close to the "institutional divide" are going to slip back rather
than cross it soon. Nevertheless, the past 2600 years, or even
5000, yield the reassuring message that during that long period
freedom has improved its extent significantly, with respect both to
geographical breadth and institutional depth.
This book is the first to attempt to describe the history of the
growth of freedom on a world scale within one single set of covers.
It sets out not to redefine freedom nor to discvoer freedom where
no one else has, nor to argue that freedom is the proud possession
of one country or tradition or people. Its purpose instead is to
show how certain elements of free society made their appearance in
an amazing variety of places, from ancient Sumeria and China to
medieval Japan, modern Czechoslovakia and Costa Rica, in areas both
inside and outside of the Western European and North American
tradition that will probably be familiar to most readers of the
English language edition of this book.
The whole story, with its fits and starts, triumphs and
tragedies, deserves the thoughtful reflection of everyone who in
the wish to establish and protect freedom would avoid needless
disappointment and despair and desires to act intelligently to
attain the attainable. But even for the quietest, the person who
has no faith in human action to improve man's lot, the story is
worth pondering, for along with failure and misery it holds much
that is noble and uplifting, tells of much gain for humanity
through patient suffering and self-sacrifice, and catches a vision
of liberty for all in the present an dpossible future that was
inconceivable at the dawn of history.
The Early Byzantine Historians is the first original study of every
significant Byzantine historian from Eusebius of Caesarea
(c.255-339) to Theophylact Simocatta (c.585-after 641?).
Individually and as a group, these authors had a decisive influence
on Byzantine culture and modern perceptions of Byzantine history.
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