Justinian's Flea: Plague, Empire and the Birth of Europe

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Jonathan Cape, 2007 - 367 pages
In the middle of the sixth century, the world's smallest organism collided with the world's mightiest empire. Twenty-five million corpses later, the Roman Empire, under her last great emperor, Justinian, was decimated. Before Yersinia pestis, the bacterium that carries bubonic plague, was through, both the Rome and Persian empires were easy pickings for the armies of Muhammad on their conquering march out of Arabia. In its wake, the plague u history's first pandemic u marked the transition from the age of Mediterranean empires to the age of European nation-states - from antiquity to the medieval world. Justinian's Flea is the story of that collision, a narrative history that weaves together evolutionary microbiology, architecture, military history, geography, rat and flea ecology, jurisprudence, theology, epidemiology, and the economics of the silk trade. The climax of Justinian's Flea u the summer of 542, when Constantinople witnessed the death of 5,000 of its citizens every day u is revealed through the experiences of the remarkable individuals whose lives are a window onto a remarkable age: Justinian himself, of course, but also his doppelganger, the Persian Shah Khusro Anushirvan, whose empire would be so weakened by plague that it essentially vanished; his general Belisarius, the greatest soldier between Caesar and Saladin, whose conquests marked the end of imperial rule in Italy and Africa; his architect, Anthemius, the mathematician-engineer who built Constantinople's Hagia Sophia (and whose brother, Alexander, was the great physician of the plague years); Tribonian, the jurist who created the Justinianic Code, the source of Europe's tradition of Civil Law; and, finally, his empress Theodora, the one-time prostitute who became co-ruler of the empire, the most politically powerful woman in European history until Elizabeth I. Melding contemporary accounts with modern disciplines, Justinian's Flea is a unique account of one of history's great hinge moments.

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About the author (2007)

William Rosen was born in California on February 12, 1955. He graduated from UCLA. Before becoming an author, he worked for nearly 25 years as an editor and publisher at Macmillan, Simon and Schuster, and the Free Press. He authored or co-authored books on education, traffic, antibiotics, and climate change. His books include Justinian's Flea: Plague, Empire, and the Birth of Europe; The Most Powerful Idea in the World: The Story of Steam, Industry, and Invention; and The Third Horseman: Climate Change and the Great Famine of the 14th Century. He died from gastrointestinal stromal cancer on April 28, 2016 at the age of 61.

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