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    Decline and Fall of the Roman City

    Decline and Fall of the Roman City by Liebeschuetz, J. H. W. G.;

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 290.00
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        130 935 Ft (124 700 Ft + 5% VAT)
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    130 935 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP Oxford
    • Date of Publication 7 June 2001

    • ISBN 9780198152477
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages498 pages
    • Size 243x163x31 mm
    • Weight 851 g
    • Language English
    • Illustrations 3 halftones, 22 maps and plans
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    Short description:

    Professor Liebeschuetz examines what happened to the cities of the Roman world in the years when the Roman Empire disintegrated. He traces the end of classical political culture, the impact of Christianization, and a progressive simplification of life styles in the lands, both East and West, that had been the Roman Empire.

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    Long description:

    This book discusses the changes which occurred in the cities of the Roman world in the period AD 400- 750. The cities of the Middle Ages, both in the East and Western parts of the old Roman Empire, differed from classical cities in fundamental ways. Professor Liebeschuetz concludes that this suggests a decline and fall in the Roman cities. At the centre of this book is an account of the decline of cities as political organizations: the replacement of government in accordance with constitutional rules by a looser and much more informal kind of oligarchical control which was paralleled by the rise of the bishop.

    Professor Liebeschuetz argues that among the factors that transformed and undermined the Roman city the most conspicuous were related to the state of the Empire, economic developments which were consequences of the breaking up of the imperial structure, as well as more localized regional circumstances. The decline and fall of the Roman city was accompanied by very great changes in life style which can be summarized as simplification and localization. Further he concludes that Christianity by teaching people to despise the things of this world helped them to come to terms with the deterioration of their worldly circumstances.

    It is a measure of the importance of this work that it should drive historians of urbanism to examine once more their understanding of the Roman city and develop new approaches to explain the undoubted 'transformations' in the urban systems of the Early Byzantine world.

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