At the beginning of the sixth century of the Christian era, the empire of Constantinople was beset with enemies and sinking to decay. The tide of barbarian invasion had lately overwhelmed one half of the ancient provinces of Rome, and these conquests, both by their effect and their example, threatened speedy downfall to the rest. The emperors became either hated from their reforms, or despised from their incapacity, and in either case their fate was the same. Frequent insurrections wasted the resources of the state, and deprived the government of all energy and enterprise; while the armies, turbulent and feeble, had thrown off the restraints of military discipline. It is the purpose of my narrative, to show how the genius of one man averted these dangers, and corrected these defects; how the tottering empire was upheld; how the successors of Augustus were enabled, for a time, to resume their former ascendancy, and to wrest from the hands of the barbarians their most important possessions...
English Coins and Tokens, with a Chapter on Greek and Roman Coins
Llewellynn Frederick William Jewitt, Barclay V. Head
bookThe Life and Death of Adolf Hitler
Robert Payne
bookGermany's High Seas Fleet in the World War : Historical Account of Naval Warfare in the WWI
Reinhard Scheer
bookGerman Society at the Close of the Middle Ages
Ernest Bax
bookTribal Custom in Anglo-Saxon Law
Frederic Seebohm
bookDelphi Collected Works of Ptolemy (Illustrated)
Claudius Ptolemy
bookThe Invasion of Europe by the Barbarians
J. B. Bury
bookHenry VIII
Albert Pollard
bookThe Age of Justinian
William Holmes
bookAnglo-Saxon Britain
Grant Allen
bookVladimir Putin A Geostrategic Russian Icon In the Shadow of Ukraine
Goeran B Johansson
bookA Little Garrison : A Realistic Novel of German Army Life of To-day
Fritz Oswald Bilse
book