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Summary End of an Empire: The Decline and Fall of Rome – LECTURE 5

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An extensive CLEAR summary of the 5TH LECTURE of the amazing course 'End of Empire: The Decline and Fall of Rome' by professor Martijn Icks. This Lecture discusses Life in the Once Roman Empire Area After 476. I loved this course, so i put a lot of effort and time both in the content and layout. I find it super important to make my summaries look clear and clean. It helped me think, read and learn. I uploaded all the sumaries of ALL THE LECTURES on Stuvia, so you can buy them as a cheap bundle! This summary will really help you during the exam. Everything the teacher said during this lecture, is IN this summary. Thanks to the clear layout, you can quickly scan through it. I wish you the best of luck! :) You can do this!

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Course: The Fall and Decline of Rome




Lecture 5

Life in the Once
Roman Empire
Area After 476




HC5

, Fall or Transformation?
When the Roman Empire ended, did Roman civilization decline/fall or transform?




Scholars’ Opinions


Gibbons
Gibbons: Rome fell due to internal moral causes (Barbarism & Religion) ! enlightenment
scholars saw the fall of Rome as the Fall of European Civilisation.



Brown
Peter Brown doesn’t see a break. Rather he describes this period as a slow and gradual
transformation / transition. Brown’s school of thought is positive.
Brown mainly used literature-evidence.



Ward-Perkins
Ward-Perkins went against Brown and also said the ending of Roman Empire was a break
and a fall, and a decline of civilization. He mainly looked at material sources, like:

Pottery
During Roman Empire: Almost industrial production of pottery. BIG QUANTITY and HIGH QUALITY.
This sort of pottery was all over the place in the empire; not only in the houses of wealthy people, but
also in those of ordinary people). However, this post-roman-empire pot was found in a royal
grave/tomb (Sutton Hoo). Ward-Perkins says: this piece of shit was found in a King’s grave! –This
was apparently the best the people could do, after the Empire had ended!

Rural settlements in Roman Empire:
Here you see two maps of Rural Italy, in the centre of the empire. Less settlements after the fall.
(However these maps misleading: dots mean slightly different things).

Animal bones in the Roman Empire:
Material evidence shows cow bones are biggest during the Roman Empire.
Cow bones in Middle Ages are however smaller than the Iron Age cow bones!




Quote by Perkins:
“Some of the recent literature on the Germanic settlements reads like an account
of a tea party at the Roman vicarage. A shy newcomer to the village, who is a (! How it’s described by other scholars)
useful prospect for the cricket team, is invited in. There is a brief moment of
awkwardness, while the host finds an empty chair and pours a fresh cup of tea;
but the conversation, and village life, soon flow on“
“(...) The new arrival had not been invited, and he brought with him a large family; (! How Ward-Perkins sees it.)
they ignored the bread and butter, and headed straight for the cake stand.”


HC5

, Signs of Decline

However evidence shows signs of certain types of decline:

• Decline in manufacture and trade of goods
• Decline in agricultural production
• Decline in living standards
• Decline in population size
• Decline in literacy (in Pompeii lots of graffiti ! lots of common people were able to read
and write) ! in the Middle Ages decline in literacy. Not even all kings could read and write.




After the Roman Armies Left:
Small Kingdoms in BRITAIN
After the Romans leave, Britain breaks up in many small kingdoms. It will take
centuries before Britain becomes a centralized kingdom again.

Money disappears: NO NEW coins are produced anymore. Why? Well, it indicates:

- Less of a need for coins: society becomes more local where coins are not
necessary: to trade with the farmer in the next village coins are not needed.
- Ability/skill to produce coins disappears: if you want coin production on the
scale the Romans had, you need skills, you need production houses, mint workers,
materials (that need to be imported) and you need mint-masters who can make
pictures in the coins, etc. The Small British kingdoms don’t have all that.
- Purpose of paying the Roman army disappears: The primary reason for the
Roman large-scale coin production was to pay the Roman soldiers. Roman army
was the biggest pressure on the Roman treasure chest.



Notes on the short British poem “The Ruin” (ca. eighth/ninth century) (maybe
referring to the Roman Baths at Bath, but not sure). (To read, look it up online) :

• The description “Work of giants” in this poem is an interesting part, as it shows
that people were so impressed that they thought the skill was almost inhuman.
• The poem also speaks of loss. We see remnants’ of a distant empire that was
once there; now gone. Now: no progress or bright future: just decline.
! People like Ward-Perkins jump on this and say: “ha, see! UK lost civilisation when Romans left!”




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