One
Prelude: The Roman World Transformed
(c.300–c.600)
IN THE THIRD CENTURY, the Roman Empire wrapped around the Mediterranean
Sea like a scarf. (See Map 1.1.) Thinner on the North African coast, it bulked large
as it enveloped what is today Spain, England, Wales, France, and Belgium, and then
evened out along the southern coast of the Danube River, following that river
eastward, taking in most of what is today called the Balkans (southwestern Europe,
including Greece), crossing the Hellespont and engulfing in its sweep the territory of
present-day Turkey, much of Syria, and all of modern Lebanon, Israel, and Egypt.
All the regions but Italy comprised what the Romans called the “provinces.”
This was the Roman Empire whose “decline and fall” was famously proclaimed
by the eighteenth-century historian Edward Gibbon. But in fact his verdict was
misplaced. The Empire was never livelier than at its reputed end. It is true that the
old elites of the cities, especially of Rome itself, largely regretted the changes taking
place around them c.250–350. They were witnessing the end of their political,
military, religious, economic, and cultural leadership, which was passing to the
provinces. But for the provincials (the Romans living outside of Italy) this was in
many ways a heady period, a long-postponed coming of age. They did not regret that
Emperor Diocletian (r.284–305) divided the Roman Empire into four parts, each
ruled by a different man. Called the Tetrarchy, the partition was tacit recognition of
the importance of the provinces. Some did, however, regret losing their place in the
sun, as happened c.400–500, to people still farther afield, whom they called
“barbarians.” In turn, the barbarians were glad to be the heirs of the Roman Empire
even as they contributed to its transformation (c.450–600).