Anthony Kaldellis, The Byzantine Republic. People and Power in New Rome, Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard Univ. Press, 2015
Table of Contents |
Although Byzantium is known to history as the Eastern
Roman Empire, scholars have long claimed that this Greek Christian theocracy
bore little resemblance to Rome. Here, in a revolutionary model of Byzantine
politics and society, Anthony Kaldellis reconnects Byzantium to its Roman
roots, arguing that from the fifth to the twelfth centuries CE the Eastern
Roman Empire was essentially a republic, with power exercised on behalf of the people
and sometimes by them too.The Byzantine Republic recovers for the historical
record a less autocratic, more populist Byzantium whose Greek-speaking citizens
considered themselves as fully Roman as their Latin-speaking “ancestors.”
Kaldellis shows that the idea of Byzantium as a rigid
imperial theocracy is a misleading construct of Western historians since the
Enlightenment. With court proclamations often draped in Christian rhetoric, the
notion of divine kingship emerged as a way to disguise the inherent
vulnerability of each regime. The legitimacy of the emperors was not predicated
on an absolute right to the throne but on the popularity of individual
emperors, whose grip on power was tenuous despite the stability of the imperial
institution itself. Kaldellis examines the overlooked Byzantine concept of the
polity, along with the complex relationship of emperors to the law and the ways
they bolstered their popular acceptance and avoided challenges. The rebellions
that periodically rocked the empire were not aberrations, he shows, but an
essential part of the functioning of the republican monarchy.
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