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Rome's Gothic Wars

Rome's Gothic Wars

Rome's Gothic Wars

From the Third Century to Alaric
Michael Kulikowski, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
May 2008
Available
Paperback
9780521608688

    Late in August 410, Rome was starving, its residents were turning on one another, and, to make matters worse, the Gothic army camped at Rome's gates was restless. The Gothic commander was Alaric, a Roman general and barbarian chieftain. Leading an army that was short of food and potentially mutinous, sacking Rome was his only way forward. The old heart of Rome's empire fell to a conqueror's sword for the first time in eight hundred years. For three days, Alaric's Goths sacked the eternal city. In the words of a contemporary, the mother of the world had been murdered.
    Alaric's story is the culmination of a long historical journey by which the Goths came to be a part of the Roman world. Whether as friends or foes of the Roman empire, the Goths and their history are entwined with the larger history of Rome in the third and fourth centuries. Rome's Gothic Wars explains how the Goths came into existence on the margins of the Roman world, how different Gothic groups dealt with the enormous power of Rome just beyond their lands, and how, in two traumatic years, thousands of Goths entered the imperial provinces and destroyed the army that was sent to suppress them, leaving the emperor of the eternal city dead on the field of battle. Unlike other histories of the barbarians, Rome's Gothic Wars shows exactly how and why modern historians understand the Goths the way they do – and why our understanding is so controversial.

    Michael Kulikowski is associate professor of history at the University of Tennessee-Knoxville. A recipient of the Solmsen Fellowship at the Institute for Research in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, he is the author of Late Roman Spain and Its Cities, which was awarded an Honorable Mention in Classics and Archaeology from the Association of American University Presses. His scholarly articles have appeared in Early Medieval Europe, Britannia, Phoenix, and Byzantium, and he has appeared on the History Channel's Barbarians series.

    • Explains clearly how the ancient evidence leads to modern historical conclusions
    • Shows the reasons for modern controversy over Gothic history
    • Uses archaeological evidence to help explain the social and economic reasons for conflicts between the Roman empire and its neighbours

    Reviews & endorsements

    “Kulikowski offers a novel, exhilarating and convincing interpretation . . . straight to the heart of a major historical debate.”
    John F. Drinkwater, author of Fifth-Century Gaul: A Crisis of Identity?

    “...a lively and important new study . . . engaging and sophisticated narrative of events.”
    Guy Halsall, author of Violence and Society in the Early Medieval West

    “Intriguing, comprehensive, and up-to-date history... The reader gets a sense of who the Goths were and why they had such a tremendous effect on Rome, defeating the Roman emperor Valens in 378, the greatest military defeat in Roman imperial history, and plundering the city of Rome in 410. In the process Kulikowski de-mystifies the nationalist mythologies surrounding the Goths while telling a fascinating story.”
    Paul Freedman, Department of History, Yale University

    “An extraordinary window back into the life-and-death struggles of the late Roman Empire. Kulikowski brings an epic conflict, rich in character and detail, to life. A great book.”
    Robert Gardner, Producer/Director Barbarians Three-time Emmy winner and Academy Award Nominee

    "Rome's Gothic Wars is a breezy and animated, yet authoritative, look at this remarkable time in history and it's sure to be of interest to anybody with a taste for character-driven history. Kulikowski approaches his subject with both an admirable zeal and a level-headed coolness that makes this book both informative and fun."
    Military History Online

    "Kulikowski does an excellent job in putting together such a confused history into this brief but effective narrative."
    Divi Filius, UNRV History - Roman Empire

    "The book is easy to read, the narrative flows well and there are many subheadings within the chapters that keep the pace moving at an appropriate rate for an introductory text. In such a short space of 184 pages the author does an exceptional job of introducing the key debates of this complex and sometimes volatile topic, while still presenting a solid contemporary analysis of the most recent sources.
    -BMCR

    "Rome's Gothic Wars is likely to surprise even experienced students of the period with its fresh perspective."
    The NYMAS Review

    "A stimulating new interpretation of Gothic origins and of such storied figures as Alaric, the sacker of Rome, and Theodosius, the exiled Roman commander who revived Roman fortunes after Adrianople. Worthwhile, too, is the accompanying narrative that gives a crisp and readable account of events from the Gothic arrival in the empire to Alaric's sack of Rome...Germanic origins have long been concealed in forest mists, but Kulikowski's study of the Goths brings much to light and is not to be missed."
    Lawrence A. Tritle, Loyola Marymount University, Military History

    See more reviews

    Product details

    May 2008
    Paperback
    9780521608688
    240 pages
    229 × 152 × 14 mm
    0.36kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Prologue: before the gates of Rome
    • 1. The Goths before Constantine
    • 2. The Roman Empire and the barbarian society
    • 3. The search for the Gothic origins
    • 4. Imperial politics and the rise of Gothic power
    • 5. Goths and Romans, 332–376
    • 6. The Battle of Adrianople
    • 7. Theodosius and the Goths
    • 8. Alaric and the sack of Rome.
      Author
    • Michael Kulikowski , University of Tennessee, Knoxville

      Michael Kulikowski is Associate Professor of History at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. A recipient of the Solmsen Fellowship at the Institute for Research in the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, he is the author of Late Roman Spain and its Cities, which was awarded an Honorable Mention in Classics and Archaeology from the Association of American University Presses. His scholarly articles have appeared in Early Medieval Europe, Britannia, Phoenix, and Byzantium and he has appeared in the History Channel's Barbarians series.