Jonathan Harris is professor of the history of Byzantium at Royal Holloway, University of London.
'Harris interrogates the evidence sensitively … showing how the
realities of power in the Eastern Mediterranean rendered simple
notions of patriotism and heroism irrelevant. … What Harris's lucid
narrative demonstrates is that there was no clear East-West,
Muslim-Christian split.' - Times Literary Supplement
*Times Literary Supplement*
“Harris offers plenty of serious scholarship, and a useful amount
of background.”—John Hinton, Catholic Herald
*Catholic Herald*
"Lucid; extremely well written with an excellent array of quotes
and spread of information."—Michael Angold, Reviews In History
*Reviews in History*
"Harris is fully in command of this Islamic conquest and records a
saga seething with treachery and avarice with rich political
overtones and giant cannonades. Christendom is at flashpoint in
this scholarly journey into a barbaric age."—Colin Gardner, Oxford
Times
*Oxford Times*
“A remarkable book, which offers numerous fresh insights and weaves
a gripping and deeply moving story that constantly startles us with
its newness, its originality, and its balance. Byzantines, Turks,
Latins - Harris breathes new life into these long-dead characters
and makes us understand both their choices and the circumstances
that led them to make those choices. This is history as it should
be written - an epic tale that rouses our imaginations and captures
our sympathies as effectively as it explains and informs.” - Colin
Wells, author of Sailing from Byzantium
*Colin Wells*
"Jonathan Harris's new account of the fall of Constantinople in
1453 is a welcome and highly readable treatment of one of the most
important events in world history. The author knows his sources
inside out and his book is a fine work of scholarship. But he also
handles his subject with narrative momentum and descriptive flair,
and he never loses sight of the humanity involved in these twilight
years of a once-great empire."—Norman Housley, author of Fighting
for the Cross
*Norman Housley*
Harris's book tells and oft-told tale in a fresh way. — Brian G. H.
Ditcham, Gillingham, Kent, England
*Sixteenth Century Journal*
“Shows expert knowledge of the Greeks in the west and of cultural
trends in humanistic thought. . . . Harris provides a sympathetic
reading of the civil wars and conflicts engendered by the empire’s
fundamental problem in this era: how to balance Byzantine
traditions with the need for military aid from the West in order to
confront the Ottoman Turks.”—Judith Herrin, Wall Street Journal
*Wall Street Journal*
“Western education has given us so little background on the
Byzantines that Harris’s thorough study will whet readers’ appetite
for more about this intriguing kingdom.”—Publishers Weekly
*Publishers Weekly*
“The End of Byzantium is a worthy successor to [earlier] books and
indeed supersedes them as an introduction to the empire in its
final hour. . . . [Harris] explains the unfamiliar without
dumbing-down and lets the players speak for themselves.”—Paul
Magdalino, American Historical Review
*American Historical Review*
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