All topics / empire resilience
Topic
You are reading the free Skim layer. Read unlocks the synthesis and sources.
Empire resilience
1
episodes
1
thinkers
0h
of conversation
4
books & papers
3
terms defined
The neighbourhood: empire resilience and the ideas it travels with. Drag to roam, click a star for the episode, click a neighbour to travel.
Drag to roam · scroll to zoom · click a neighbour to travel · click a star for the episode
From foundational to frontier
Climb the spectrum. The most accessible conversations come first.
Start here
ACCESSIBLECOREFRONTIER
The lexicon
Every term the guests lean on, in plain language. Read one in full, or filter to find it.
What the corpus says
The throughline across every conversation that touches this idea.
Kaldellis argues the Byzantine Empire is a continuation of the Roman Empire, challenging the notion of a distinct Byzantine identity.
Anthony Kaldellis · The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire
The Edict of Caracalla in 212 AD extended Roman citizenship to all free inhabitants, reshaping governance and societal structure.
Anthony Kaldellis · The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire
Constantine's conversion to Christianity was likely a personal belief rather than a strategic political maneuver.
Anthony Kaldellis · The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire
The decline of the Western Roman Empire was driven by internal instability and reliance on barbarian troops.
Anthony Kaldellis · The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire
The Byzantine Empire's crises were primarily due to external shocks rather than internal decay, according to Kaldellis.
Anthony Kaldellis · The Rise and Fall of the Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire
Voices on empire resilience
4 standout quotes from across the corpus.
Go read
4 books and papers cited across these episodes.
For the specialist
What experts find new
3 expert-level takeaways for a specialist reader.
At the frontier
Still unresolved
1 open questions flagged across these conversations.
The thinkers
Who takes this idea on, by how often they return to it.