David's Reviews > Byzantium: The Early Centuries

Byzantium by John Julius Norwich
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it was amazing
bookshelves: history-middle-east, history-greece, religion-christianity

Having read all three volumes of Byzantium by Norwich, I have found that they filled in the blank spaces of my knowledge of medieval history, especially of the Levant and Greece, where I had roamed much of my mature youth in my 20's up to my 50's (and still roaming). My reading of Norwich's trilogy eventually revitalized my interest in ancient Rome and the history of the Church. Having travelled and lived in these areas before I read the trilogy, I found myself "connecting the dots" so often that I kept copious notes on tiny notebooks (my way of consuming a well written book).

The richness with which Norwich writes drives the narrative forward. I loved this intellectual light that shone down dark paths of my ignorance and capturing subjects that, being married into the Greek culture, I had to know perforce. By the time I finished reading the trilogy, I found that I was ahead on many points of accuracy on the other side of what most people who had grown up with this history that had been passed down to them through osmosis.

Now I would like to go to Runciman, whose name even sounds medieval and whose books I saw in a Beirut bookstore in the 60's and had vowed to read but never got around to it and then of course, Gibbon.

Note: Jan 2014 The whole trilogy: Early Centuries, Apogee, Decline and Fall is some of the best popular writing of history as I've ever read. It's a long read and a slow one because of the detail. You want to hold each page on your tongue like a rich chocolate bon-bon and wish that it would melt into your brain. I intend to read the whole trilogy again. The history of Byzantium links for the student of history the ancient age with the beginning of the modern.
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Reading Progress

Started Reading
May 8, 1996 – Finished Reading
January 25, 2014 – Shelved
September 1, 2020 – Shelved as: history-middle-east
September 1, 2020 – Shelved as: history-greece
September 1, 2020 – Shelved as: religion-christianity

Comments Showing 1-7 of 7 (7 new)

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message 1: by Abigail (new)

Abigail Bok Love your image of the experience of absorbing the information in a really meaty book!


David A good reading experience to me is like a favorite room in a large house, a retreat from ephemeral everyday nonsense. Thanks for your comment, Abigail.


message 3: by Abigail (new)

Abigail Bok For me it's also a physical experience, like an endorphin rush. Especially if it expands my vocabulary or compels me to stretch to comprehend. I can feel my horizons expand in a way that never fails to be exhilarating. An example that comes to mind is the experience of reading Patrick Leigh Fermor's A Time of Gifts.


message 4: by David (last edited Apr 03, 2022 02:18PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

David From what you've told me, I've put Fermor's works on my To Read list. His trek then was probably safer that it would be today. My wife tells me that I've gone through life with bullets, knives and arrows just missing me like an Abbot and Costello movie. It's been at least as comical. I often imagine the catastrophes that could have easily befallen me through all the stupid chances I've taken like balancing myself on the lip of Victoria Falls or stepping an inch in the wrong direction off of a rocky mountain footpath only 10 inches wide in a canyon above a rushing river in Kurdistan.


message 5: by Abigail (new)

Abigail Bok Ah, to be young and stupid again! I once ran for half a mile bent double behind the berm of the target range at the Point Mugu Naval Base because of a report of a rare shorebird being sighted on the beach at the other end. Yes, they were firing at the time. My then-boyfriend never spoke to me again. And, more important, the bird had flown.


message 6: by David (last edited Apr 22, 2020 12:37PM) (new) - rated it 5 stars

David David wrote: "From what you've told me, I've put Fermor's works on my To Read list. His trek then was probably safer that it would be today. My wife tells me that I've gone through life with bullets, knives and ..."
Now, that's something I would never do--for a bird. Maybe a something with nice plumage in a bathing suit.


message 7: by Nick (new) - added it

Nick super review, keep travelling and reading


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