Peter N. Bell, Social Conflict in the Age of Justinian: Its Nature, Management, and Mediation, Oxford:
Oxford University Press 2013, 416pp.
CONTENTS |
Our understanding
of Late Antiquity can be transformed by the non-dogmatic application of social
theory to more traditional evidence when studying major social conflicts in the
Eastern Roman Empire, not least under the Emperor Justinian (527-565). Social
Conflict in the Age of Justinian explores a range of often violent conflicts
across the whole empire - on the land, in religion, and in sport - during this
pivotal period in European history. Drawing on both sociology and social
psychology, and on his experience as a senior British Civil Servant dealing
with violent political conflicts in Northern Ireland and elsewhere, Bell shows
that such conflicts were a basic feature of the overwhelmingly agricultural
political economy of the empire.
These conflicts were
reflected at the ideological level and lead to intense persecution of
intellectuals and Pagans as an ever more robust Christian ideological hegemony
was established. In challenging the loyalties of all social classes, they also
increased the vulnerability of an emperor and his allies. The need to
legitimise the emperor, through an increasingly sacralised monarchy, and to
build a loyal constituency, consequently remained a top priority for Justinian,
even if his repeated efforts to unite the churches failed.
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