154:, after noting a belief by many that it was engendered by Islamic influence, he asserts that it was, "an obvious corollary to the monophysite belief: if we accept only the divine nature of Christ — which is by nature impossible to depict — and reject the human, we cannot logically approve of a 2- or 3- dimensional portrayal of him as a human being."
161:: "If you ask a man for change, he will give you a piece of philosophy about the Begotten and the Unbegotten; if you enquire the price of a loaf, he replies: 'The Father is greater and the Son inferior'; or if you ask whether the bath is ready, the answer you receive is that the Son was made out of nothing."
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as emperor in
Christmas 800 in Rome by the Pope. Norwich chooses this event, which marks the end of the Byzantines' sole claim to imperial status and the unquestioned acceptance by the West of the emperor at Constantinople as sole head of all Christendom, as the decisive moment which defines the end
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142:, Norwich notes that the earliest writings do not mention this and only the latest writing by a contemporaneous source discloses the putative event. Further, he infers the emotions of the principal players and renders judgment on most of the Byzantine Emperors and some others. Concerning
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he asserts that his death "was not deeply mourned," noting that "the tyranny of his tax-gatherers had caused serious discontent ... ." But he also avers that
Justinian had left the Empire, "infinitely richer in amenities, services and public works, and incomparably more beautiful."
193:. Norwich's writing was described as "plummy" and the historical detail he brings to the period is praised, but the reviewer thought at times the narrative was distant and the descriptions overly ornate. The book became a
178:"He is brilliant... He writes like the most cultivated modern diplomat, attached by a freak of time to the Byzantine court, with intimate knowledge, tactful judgement and a consciousness of the surviving monuments." (
169:"The reader is conveyed in comfort, as it were in a very superior hovercraft, which glides smoothly over all the unevenness of the ground, to the regular, melodious sound of the author's prose." (
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For close questions, Norwich discusses the primary sources, and where they disagree or agree as the case may be. For example, regarding the miraculous appearance of a cross in the sky at the
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Every chapter is introduced with a contemporaneous quote, for example
Chapter 7 "Of Heresies and Huns" begins with this cultural comment from St.
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In the book, Norwich covers the period 286-802 AD, from the establishment of the
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and the eastern empire's fight for survival in the 7th century. The reaction to
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lead to the ascension of Irene of Athens, and in turn to the coronation of the
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Norwich progresses through the demise of the tetrarchic system and the rise of
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Norwich also comments on historical issues. In discussing the appearance of
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