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Lamb Harold. Constantinople: Birth of an Empire

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Lamb Harold. Constantinople: Birth of an Empire
New York, NY : Alfred A. Knopf, 1957.
— 334 p. illus., maps.
Harold Lamb gives a comprehensive account of the life and reign of the Roman Emperor Justinian I (482-565), from his origin as the peasant Petrus Sabbatius, to the purple clad Imperator. Upon Justinian’s ascension to the throne the western provinces had been occupied by hostile barbarians for over a generation. In the east, what remained of the Roman Empire faced invasion by the Huns from the north, and by an undiminished Persian Empire across the eastern border. Despite all of this Justinian managed to withstand the waves of invasion, embark on vast architectural projects across the empire, and restore Roman mastery over Mediterranean.
Lamb also examines the colorful personalities surrounding Justinian. His wife Theodora, the actress turned empress, who was more spymaster than anything else; the ever victorious count Belisarius, who, despite his popularity with the military, the people, and the lost provinces he reclaimed for the empire, refused to take up arms and overthrow his emperor as so many other Roman generals had done before him.
Constantinople: Birth of an Empire is a great resource for anyone interested in eastern Roman/Byzantine history during the age of Justinian.
Harold Albert Lamb (1892-1962) served in both World War. He began writing during his school days, starting with fiction, but turning to exploration of the less-known history of the East with his Genghis Khan (1927). That highly successful book was followed by, among others: Tamerlane (1928), The Crusades (two volumes, 1930-1), Omar Khayydm (1934), The March of the Barbarians (1940), Alexander of Macedon (1946), The March of Muscovy (1948), The City and the Tsar (1948), Suleiman the Magnificent (1951), Theodora and the Emperor (1952), and Charlemagne (1954). Since visiting Constantinople for the first time when writing The Crusades, Mr. Lamb has returned to it many times, and has visited every corner of the Byzantine Empire except the Upper Nile.
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