
The Modern Scholar: The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire
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Narrado por:
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Thomas F. Madden
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De:
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Thomas F. Madden
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Would you recommend this audiobook to a friend? If so, why?
Although the title says "Decline and Fall," this lecture series is not just a summary of Gibbons' famous work of the same name.This series focuses on governance and political power. Military History, Scandals, the Arts, Religion, Famous Biographies, Technology, and the Culture of Daily Life are only mentioned if they have direct relevance or influence on the ebb and flow of power during the 500 or so Empire years.
Professor Madden presents a clear and easy to follow explanation of who held power in Rome from the death of the Republic to the Barbarian removal of the last Emperor of the West. He traces the rise and fall of dynastic imperial families like the Julio-Claudians, Flavians and Antonines. He explains the military's power to decide the Emperor of their choice. He explains how prominent Christians went from dying in the arena to living and ruling in the palace. And finally, he illustrates how Rome's international relations with Barbarians led to the final sacking and the end of imperial self-rule.
This lecture series isn't a bells and whistles account of all the crazy things that occurred during the Roman Empire. It's a clear and concise framework that puts the trivia into context. This is basic knowledge that will enrich listeners' understanding of any further encounter with information about the ancient Roman Empire. This is the bare historical foundation that's solid enough to let you build on it as high as you please.
Rise & Fall: Emperors, Army, Church & Barbarians
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Good for a review
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Great Introduction to Roman History
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Professor Madden is well versed and an interesting speaker, who occasionally searches for a word or loses a thought, but who wouldn't if you were talking for hours. I think other reviewers have been way too harsh on him.
I especially love his unbiased approach to history. A lot of this, and other lectures of his has to do with early Christianity, and its many schisms. I cannot tell you if he is a Protestant, Catholic, or Atheist, and I cannot tell you how rare this is with history professors. Their attempts at an unbiased presentation are usually so blatantly an "attempt" and their talks are very colored one way or another. After 4 lectures I haven't been able to pin any view point on him and while this may not matter to other listeners, this has really made me trust his information a great deal.
Excellent Coverage
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One of the puzzling questions he poses is, why didn't Rome fall in the mid 200s? Everything went wrong for the Romans during that period. At one point, the provinces of what we now call France, Spain, and Great Britain, actually broke away from Rome and formed their own mini empire.
Rome was also in an economic tailspin, with the currency so utterly devalued that almost no one would accept Roman coins. Even the Roman government refused to be paid taxes using Roman coins. Instead, barter was accepted, with oil, or grain, used in place of currency.
No one lasted as emperor for more than a year or two, and the army periodically refused to fight for the emperor if it looked like the opposing army was larger.
How Rome survived, and even thrived, later on, makes for fascinating listening.
Comprehensive and entertaining
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A great set of lectures
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Instead the book is basically a litany of emperors and generals. The sort of thing that perhaps you're required to know for the test if you're studying to be a card-carrying historian, but which is of limited interest or use to the rest of us. The lectures start (following the part where he throws out and rejects various theories) with Julius Caeser and the Julio-Caludians, and if you know at least the outlines of that part of the story, as many of us do, things start to get pretty boring. But then he passes through that bunch and there's 4-5 more hours of so-and-so succeeded so-and-so, and you realize that hey, this never ending parade of emperors actually continued for like 400 years and was pretty well recorded. You also realize there's a reason no one's ever made an "I, Pupienus". Seriously, there's dozens of these guys you've never heard of and don't care about.
And Madden is just not a great lecturer. He's not terrible, but he seems to sigh a lot, which made me feel like he was disappointed in me as a listener. More likely, he was bored with his own story, because it's boring.
The unfulfilled promise of this program is to get at the deep causes of the fall of Rome. Madden's basic story is that the fundamental failure in Rome was a constitutional one, failing to specify the order of succession, which led perpetual rivalries between claimants to the throne. Perhaps, but given his own dismissal of stories that work just as well in the east as west, he never really explains why this explanation should pass that test. I'd also like to hear what other historians say on this topic; Madden mentions Gibbons, but doesn't say much about him, or anyone else's analysis. Basically, I kept waiting for the analysis lecture to come, and it simply doesn't.
It has a much broader focus, but if you're interested in this topic in general, let me suggest Ian Morris' recent book "Why the West Rules for Now". That one may leave you not knowing the Latin names of all the trees--err, emperors--but at least it acknowledges the forest.
Fails to come together
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I found the lectures very informative. It gives you and overview of a very important time in the history of mankind. In more than one way it is also in this time that the seed of Western Civilisation is planted.
Madden has a way of making difficult ideas and concepts easily graspable. I enjoyed listening to him. However, he did "uhm" quite a lot and sometimes ended his sentences abruptly as if he doesn't know what to say about a certain idea he wants to convey.
The pdf course guide is excellent and doesn't only help you to recap what you've listened to, it has good suggestions for further reading.
I would recommend this recording of prof. Madden's lectures to anyone who wants to know more about the Roman Empire and its emperors. The contents is well structured and easily accessible.
Informative, gripping and inspiring
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An excellent overview of Roman history
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Excellent Detailed Series of Lectures
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