* List of Maps * Preface * I. The Invention of Byzantine Strategy *1. Attila and the Crisis of Empire *2. The Emergence of the New Strategy * II. Byzantine Diplomacy: The Myth and the Methods *3. Envoys *4. Religion and Statecraft *5. The Uses of Imperial Prestige *6. Dynastic Marriages *7. The Geography of Power *8. Bulghars and Bulgarians *9. The Muslim Arabs and Turks * III. The Byzantine Art of War *10. The Classical Inheritance *11. The Strategikon of Maurikios *12. After the Strategikon *13. Leo VI and NavalWarfare *14. The Tenth-Century Military Renaissance *15. Strategic Maneuver: Herakleios Defeats Persia * Conclusion: Grand Strategy and the Byzantine "Operational Code" * Appendix: Was Strategy Feasible in Byzantine Times? * Emperors from Constantine I to Constantine XI * Glossary * Notes * Works Cited * Index of Names * General Index
The Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire is written with a profound knowledge of the field, a thorough mastery of the sources and secondary literature, and a lively and engaging style that both specialists and general readers will appreciate. -- Peter B. Golden, Rutgers University Edward Luttwak makes a persuasive, well-documented argument that the Byzantines--given the continuity of their institutions, their sense of a historical mission, and their own manuals on statecraft and warfare--had a coherent strategy that enabled them to preserve an empire shielded by few geographical barriers and surrounded by a host of hostile neighbors. -- Eric McGeer, author of Sowing the Dragon's Teeth: Byzantine Warfare in the Tenth Century
Edward N. Luttwak serves or has served as a contractor for the Office of Net Assessment of the U.S. Department of Defense and for the U.S. armed forces, and as a consultant to the U.S. National Security Council, the White House Chief of Staff, and several allied governments.
The Grand Strategy of the Byzantine Empire is written with a
profound knowledge of the field, a thorough mastery of the sources
and secondary literature, and a lively and engaging style that both
specialists and general readers will appreciate. -- Peter B.
Golden, Rutgers University
Edward Luttwak makes a persuasive, well-documented argument that
the Byzantines--given the continuity of their institutions, their
sense of a historical mission, and their own manuals on statecraft
and warfare--had a coherent strategy that enabled them to preserve
an empire shielded by few geographical barriers and surrounded by a
host of hostile neighbors. -- Eric McGeer, author of Sowing the
Dragon's Teeth: Byzantine Warfare in the Tenth Century
One of America's leading strategic minds...The traditional
stereotype of the Byzantine Empire, established by Edward Gibbon in
his Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, has undergone
considerable revision of late, thanks to a renaissance of Byzantine
studies, to which Edward Luttwak has now made an important
contribution. Luttwak had long promised a sequel to Grand
Strategy of the Roman Empire covering the Roman Empire in the
East from the fourth through the fifteenth centuries, and finally
it is here. -- Stuart Koehl * Weekly Standard *
This book is good history as well as being an insightful commentary
on strategy...American soldiers and diplomats who helped turn
enemies into allies in creating the Sunni Awakening in Iraq will
recognize and empathize with what the Eastern Romans did for
centuries. This is a timely and relevant work...Luttwak does an
excellent job of describing the intelligence system of the Eastern
empire, from its tactical use of scouting and patrolling to its
strategic use of spies and double agents in the courts of its
enemies...Luttwak does a great service in giving us a readable
account of how the Byzantines managed national-security strategy in
a way that should be useful to contemporary soldiers and civilian
policymakers. It is also a very good read. -- Gary Anderson *
Washington Times *
Luttwak tells his story well. He is especially good on fine detail.
Whether describing the lethal "composite reflex bow" used by Hun
archers or the complex but surprisingly efficient Byzantine tax
system, he is both vivid and exact...Though no Hun bows survive,
Luttwak's meticulous descriptions convey their deadly efficiency.
It is through such details that a modern reader captures some sense
of the sheer terror that those ancient raiders inspired. Even on
obscure theological matters, such as the wrangles over
"monotheletism"--the proposition that Christ had two natures, human
and divine, united by a single will--he is refreshingly
lucid...Notwithstanding its erudition, this is an impassioned book,
and all the better for that...Historically remote as they are, the
Byzantines may have something to teach Americans about long-term
survival. -- Eric Ormsby * Wall Street Journal *
If there's a single overriding lesson for Americans from Byzantium
in Luttwak's fine and definitive work, it is that we ought to make
use of Byzantine methods so that we may never be in Byzantine
straits. -- Joshua Trevino * New Ledger *
Nothing Luttwak writes is uninteresting...His ventures into the
military history of antiquity and the Middle Ages are unlike the
work of academic historians and equally unlike the superficial
surveys produced by journalists for the general public. Thanks to
his polyglot reading, his many scholarly contacts and his
opinionated style, he succeeds wondrously in reaching both
specialists and the public...If the practicality of what he
suggests is less than obvious in any given contemporary crisis, the
historical analysis which has brought him to his conclusions is
exciting, challenging and erudite. It is rare and refreshing to
find such deep research on a great empire of the past deployed so
eloquently for the guidance of the beleaguered governments of the
present. -- Glen Bowersock * London Review of Books *
When students of grand strategy search the past for lessons, rarely
do they look to the Byzantine Empire. Luttwak, who wrote a
well-regarded history of the grand strategy of ancient Rome, thinks
this is a mistake. In this exhaustive study, he shows how the
rulers of the eastern half of the late Roman Empire were the true
masters of the craft. Although the Byzantine Empire occupied a more
vulnerable geographic position than its western counterpart, it
lasted almost 1,000 years longer. Luttwak argues that the
Byzantines survived by relying less on brute military power and
more on allies, diplomacy, and the containment of their enemies.
They were able, he claims, "to generate disproportionate power from
whatever military strength could be mustered, by combining it with
the art of persuasion, guided by superior information." The book
makes this argument through fascinating chapters on religion and
statecraft, envoys, dynastic marriages, and the Byzantine art of
war, as well as through evocative details about weapons, military
tactics, and taxes. Although the Byzantine Empire did not have a
foreign minister, intelligence agencies, or theories of "smart
power," it certainly acted as if it did. -- G. John Ikenberry *
Foreign Affairs *
The volume's grand sweep is appealing. It unpicks the hard-nosed
considerations underpinning the Byzantine complexities of the
strategies that permitted the eastern Empire to outlast its western
counterpart by almost a millennium, introducing key diplomatic
factors such as Christianity, prestige and marriage, surveying the
tradition of Byzantine military analysis, and highlighting the
issues at the heart of Byzantine survival. -- Michael Whitby *
Times Literary Supplement *
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