| store | availability | item price | delivered | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon UK | ||||
| The Hut | ||||
| Sprint Books | ||||
| Blackwells | ||||
| WH Smith (collect in store) | ||||
| Base | ||||
| The Book Place | ||||
| WH Smith | ||||
| Pick a Book | ||||
| Global Investor | ||||
| Waterstones | ||||
| The Book People | ||||
| zavvi | ||||
| Play.com | ||||
| Another Bookshop | ||||
| History Bookshop | ||||
| Tesco Books | ||||
| BookFellas | ||||
| Foyles | ||||
| Samedaybooks |
Above you will see price and availability details for Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire by Edward Gibbon from the leading UK book stores.
To allow you to quickly compare prices, the stores are arranged in order of delivered price, cheapest first. Click on a store name to buy this book or to view further details.
| Books Related to The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire Edward Gibbon - ISBN: 9626340711 |
|---|
View other editions of The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. |
| Customer Reviews |
|---|
Superb book, terrible abridgement - Rated Excellent but too heavily abridged - Rated My main gripe and the reason for the lack of stars is that this version is SO heavily abridged. I picked up this book in the hope of learning not just political history but military history. All details of all battles that Gibbon apparently detailed so painstakingly have been removed. There are numerous other abridgments that have been made (footnotes and gorgraphic details) that I'm sure also speed up the prose but if you are looking for the definitive Gibbon you will not find it here. I understand the reasons for it as explained in the foreword but the detail that has been removed needs to be highlighted in Amazon's own review because this book despite it's quality as a historical political document has been a disappointment to me. Don't doubt or delay - this is well worth buying! - Rated full description of the personalities of the roman empire - Rated Gibbon's genius is always worth listening to... - Rated First Gibbon. Leaving aside the ways in which scholarship has moved on since the eighteenth century, it has always been recognized that Gibbon's later volumes -- those that deal with the Byzantines and the period after the fall of the Empire in the west in 476 -- are much weaker than his earlier volumes. There are times when Gibbon is grossly unfair to the Byzantines; times when he exaggerates the strengths of an emperor (e.g. his words of praise for the failure emperor Manuel Comnenus in this recording); times when he is pretty silly -- e.g. suggesting that Constantine VI was poisoned by the wife of his son Romanus II or in his prurient but pointless interest in the love affairs of the wife of Belisarius; times when he strays a very long way from his main subject e.g. by writing about the Tartars and the Mongols and just seems to be writing about what takes his fancy. Naxos has frankly done a very bad job indeed of editing these excerpts. Whoever wrote the linkage simply does not know the elementary facts of Byzantine history and so slips into some crude blunders, e.g. when the linkage text suggests that the Greek church is different from the Crusaders because it rejects the Trinity. This is simply ignorance. The same thing shows through in the pronunciation of many names, and even less excusably some basic words. "The decent obscurity of a learned language" for example is read as "The decent obscurity of a learnt language" which is simply meaningless. The main thrust of these volumes should be the cahnging fortunes and achievements of the eastern empire but the crucial high Byzantine centuries from 800 to 1071 are largely ignored and the impression is given that Basil II, by far the most powerful mid-Byzantine Emperor, was a little known non-entity. OK the sources for Basil II are weak but Gibbon has a good chapter on Romanus Lecapenus, another tenth century emperor, but it does not make this recording. Instead we get scandal, Mongols, and a great deal of irrelevancy. Surely Naxos could have checked their selection and their commentary with a reputable historian of the Byzantine Empire? I would urge them to try again. Gibbon deserves it and despite all these failings, I can promise that anyone who listens to these CDs will enjoy the experience. But it could easily have been so much better. |
search for books
similar books
bestselling books
compare other prices
Cheap Games at playspot
quick links
subject directory : Biographies, Business, Children's, Fiction, Food & Drink, Health, History, Home & Garden, Horror, Humor, Religion, Science Fiction, Society, Sports, Travel, other subjects.
information pages : About BookkooB, Release Dates, Bookmarklet, Disclaimer, Privacy Policy. Compare Book Prices.








