Tom Holland is a historian of the ancient world and a translator.
His books include Rubicon: The Triumph and Tragedy of the
Roman Republic, Persian Fire, In the Shadow
of the Sword and The Forge of Christendom. He
has adapted Homer, Herodotus, Thucydides and Virgil for the BBC. In
2007, he was the winner of the Classical Association prize, awarded
to “the individual who has done most to promote the study of the
language, literature and civilization of Ancient Greece and Rome.”
He lives in London with his family.
Visit the author's website at www.tom-holland.org.
A Best Book of the Year: The Guardian, The Daily Telegraph, The
Daily Mail, The Independent, The Evening Standard, The
Spectator
“An entertaining account of the fraught last years of the Dark
Ages.”
—The Wall Street Journal
“An enjoyable and exuberantly argued book. . . . Holland combines
sound scholarly credentials with a gift for storytelling on a
magisterial scale. . . . In a tightly woven and sometimes witty
narrative, [Holland demonstrates] the subtle interplay of genuine
religious sentiment and cynical power politics.”
—The Economist
“A sweeping and hugely enlightening study of Western history.”
—Providence Journal
“Prodigious. . . . A marvelous, enthralling read, [it] gives a
lively sense of these turbulent centuries that were so crucial in
the making of Western civilization. . . . Narrative history in the
grand manner, written with the panache and confidence we associate
with the great historians of the 18th and 19th centuries.”
—Daily Telegraph (London)
“A superb, fascinating and erudite medieval banquet of slaughter,
sanctity and sex, filled with emperors, whores and monks.”
—Simon Sebag-Montefiore, The Evening Standard (London)
“Fresh from his triumphs in Rome and Persia, Tom Holland turns his
brilliant narrative spotlight on the so-called ‘dark ages’ that
followed the Western Empire’s decline. Global in reach, this book
sweeps thrillingly over the troubled centuries that saw the triumph
of Byzantium, the ascent of Islam—and the lingering disaster of the
Crusades. . . . Unlike other blockbuster histories, this one takes
as much care with beliefs as with the battles they provoked. We all
live in the feverish aftermath of these events, which makes
Holland’s galloping guidance all the more timely.”
—The Independent (London)
“A fast and lively lesson in that period which school so often
misses out. . . . Another blockbuster.”
—The Sunday Times (London)
“A tremendously good read, which will no doubt gain more accolades
and many more readers.”
—The Sunday Telegraph (London)
“As a stirring, vivid and formidably learned analysis of the events
surrounding the Millennium, this will hardly be equalled.
Extraordinary insights and lapidary phrases abound.”
—The Independent on Sunday (London)
“It is perfectly right for Holland to claim a great deal for the
11th century, of which his book is a splendid, highly coloured
canvas.”
—The Guardian (London)
“Nobody believes in the Dark Ages any more, but Holland’s
brightness and clarity makes this account of the year 1000
exceptionally pleasing.”
—The Scotsman
“This was the era when dragons were still thought to stalk the
Earth; when daredevil noblemen would cover their bodies in honey
and allow it to be licked off by ravening bears. . . . Mightily
readable—far more than the stories of Greeks and Romans, this is
your history.”
—Mail on Sunday (London)
“Remarkable. . . . Both a vastly entertaining read, with
grandiloquent Gibbon-like sweep, as well as deeply intelligent: it
constitutes a major contribution to some of the most crucial issues
of our time.”
—John Cornwell, The Tablet
“An exhilarating sweep across European history either side of the
year 1000; riveting.”
—The Spectator
“In the year 1000, Western Europe was no more than a primitive and
fearful region in the shadow of Byzantium and Islam. Yet as Tom
Holland demonstrates in this fascinating history it was also the
crucible for the creation of the Europe we know today. From
the age of Canute and William the Conqueror, Pope Gregory VII and
the Vikings this vivid and bloodthirsty history is a riveting
insight into what made us the people we are.”
—The Daily Mail (London)
If Y2K proved anticlimactic, the Y1K crisis-apocalyptic expectations surrounding the year 1000-had a lasting impact, argues this far-ranging, over-reaching history of medieval Europe. Holland (Persian Fire) surveys the two and a half centuries between the fragmenting of Charlemagne's empire and the First Crusade, visiting milestones like the Norman conquest of England along with lesser invasions, raids, feudal vendettas, kidnappings and pope vs. antipope squabbles. He discerns movement amid the tumult and slaughter, as Catholic Europe went from anxious beleaguerment by the barbarians coming from every direction to confident expansionism. Holland's thesis that it was the disappointment of millennial hopes that gave Christendom its new focus on worldly progress is weakly supported; he has a hard time showing that anyone besides churchmen thought about the approaching millennium. His greater theme is Catholicism's civilizing mission: pagan foes are converted and co-opted, a new class of marauding knights is tamed by Church peace councils, and Pope Gregory VII's defiance of Emperor Henry IV inaugurates church-state separation. Holland's colorful, energetic narrative vividly captures the medieval mindset, while conveying the dynamism that underlay a seemingly static age. Maps. (May 5) Copyright 2009 Reed Business Information.
A Best Book of the Year: The Guardian, The Daily Telegraph,
The Daily Mail, The Independent, The Evening Standard, The
Spectator
"An entertaining account of the fraught last years of the Dark
Ages."
-The Wall Street Journal
"An enjoyable and exuberantly argued book. . . . Holland combines
sound scholarly credentials with a gift for storytelling on a
magisterial scale. . . . In a tightly woven and sometimes witty
narrative, [Holland demonstrates] the subtle interplay of genuine
religious sentiment and cynical power politics."
-The Economist
"A sweeping and hugely enlightening study of Western history."
-Providence Journal
"Prodigious. . . . A marvelous, enthralling read, [it] gives a
lively sense of these turbulent centuries that were so crucial in
the making of Western civilization. . . . Narrative history in the
grand manner, written with the panache and confidence we associate
with the great historians of the 18th and 19th centuries."
-Daily Telegraph (London)
"A superb, fascinating and erudite medieval banquet of slaughter,
sanctity and sex, filled with emperors, whores and monks."
-Simon Sebag-Montefiore, The Evening Standard (London)
"Fresh from his triumphs in Rome and Persia, Tom Holland turns his
brilliant narrative spotlight on the so-called 'dark ages' that
followed the Western Empire's decline. Global in reach, this book
sweeps thrillingly over the troubled centuries that saw the triumph
of Byzantium, the ascent of Islam-and the lingering disaster of the
Crusades. . . . Unlike other blockbuster histories, this one takes
as much care with beliefs as with the battles they provoked. We all
live in the feverish aftermath of these events, which makes
Holland's galloping guidance all the more timely."
-The Independent (London)
"A fast and lively lesson in that period which school so often
misses out. . . . Another blockbuster."
-The Sunday Times (London)
"A tremendously good read, which will no doubt gain more accolades
and many more readers."
-The Sunday Telegraph (London)
"As a stirring, vivid and formidably learned analysis of the events
surrounding the Millennium, this will hardly be equalled.
Extraordinary insights and lapidary phrases abound."
-The Independent on Sunday (London)
"It is perfectly right for Holland to claim a great deal for the
11th century, of which his book is a splendid, highly coloured
canvas."
-The Guardian (London)
"Nobody believes in the Dark Ages any more, but Holland's
brightness and clarity makes this account of the year 1000
exceptionally pleasing."
-The Scotsman
"This was the era when dragons were still thought to stalk the
Earth; when daredevil noblemen would cover their bodies in honey
and allow it to be licked off by ravening bears. . . . Mightily
readable-far more than the stories of Greeks and Romans, this is
your history."
-Mail on Sunday (London)
"Remarkable. . . . Both a vastly entertaining read, with
grandiloquent Gibbon-like sweep, as well as deeply intelligent: it
constitutes a major contribution to some of the most crucial issues
of our time."
-John Cornwell, The Tablet
"An exhilarating sweep across European history either side of the
year 1000; riveting."
-The Spectator
"In the year 1000, Western Europe was no more than a primitive and
fearful region in the shadow of Byzantium and Islam. Yet as Tom
Holland demonstrates in this fascinating history it was also the
crucible for the creation of the Europe we know today. From the age
of Canute and William the Conqueror, Pope Gregory VII and the
Vikings this vivid and bloodthirsty history is a riveting insight
into what made us the people we are."
-The Daily Mail (London)
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