Author(s): Gibbon, Edward
Reader(s): Timson, David
Label: Naxos AudioBooks
Genre: Non-Fiction
Catalogue No: NA0129
Barcode: 9781843797197
Release Date: 09/2014

GIBBON, E.: Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, Vol. 5 (The) (Unabridged)

The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire has always maintained its initial appeal to both the general public and scholars alike. Its sheer scale is daunting, encompassing over a millennium of history, covering not merely the Western Empire from the days of the early emperors to its extinction in AD 476, but also the Eastern Empire, which lasted for another thousand years until the Turks vanquished it in 1453. But Gibbon’s style, part historical fact and part literature, is enticing, and the sheer honesty of the man, who endeavours to be scrupulously impartial in his presentation, endears him to the reader. In this recording, David Timson incorporates the most salient of Gibbon’s footnotes.

In Volume V (Chapters XLVII–LVI), Gibbon further explores the influence of Christianity on the fall of the Roman Empire. He looks at the growth of the worship of Christian images and the resulting persecution by Leo III, emperor of the East. The conflict is intensified as a split develops between the Eastern and Western churches, a weakness that encourages attacks from Lombardy. Gibbon then moves to the foundation of the Moslem religion and the attempts of the Arabs to besiege Constantinople.

Tracklist

Disc 1
Gibbon, Edward - Author
Timson, David (Reader)
1Chapter 4707:38
Timson, David (Reader)
2Yet in the insufficient creed of the Nazarenes…12:03
Timson, David (Reader)
3III. Such were the fleeting shadows of the Docetes.09:28
Timson, David (Reader)
4V. The grovelling Ebionite and the fantastic Docetes…10:36
Timson, David (Reader)
5Such honours might incite the faithful to combat and die…09:46
Timson, David (Reader)
6It was the duty of Cyril to enlighten the zeal and ignorance…09:48
Timson, David (Reader)
7His throne was distant and inaccessible…09:46
Timson, David (Reader)
8Secluded from the church and from the world…09:59
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 2
1A quarter of a mile from the Thracian Bosphorus…11:17
Timson, David (Reader)
2The disorders of thirty years at length produced…11:36
Timson, David (Reader)
3Justinian has been already seen in the various lights…10:03
Timson, David (Reader)
4With these sentiments, it was incumbent on him…09:44
Timson, David (Reader)
5The faculties of sense and reason are least capable…10:38
Timson, David (Reader)
6Armenia and Abyssinia were infected by the speech…10:47
Timson, David (Reader)
7The desire of gaining souls for God…07:34
Timson, David (Reader)
8When the Portuguese first opened the navigation…07:12
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 3
1In this spiritual distress the expiring faction…09:58
Timson, David (Reader)
2IV. Since the age of Constantine…09:54
Timson, David (Reader)
3A more important conquest still remained…08:33
Timson, David (Reader)
4Christianity was more deeply rooted in the Abyssinian empire…10:29
Timson, David (Reader)
5Chapter 4809:23
Timson, David (Reader)
6After this foundation of Byzantine history…11:30
Timson, David (Reader)
7We shall imagine ourselves transported…10:42
Timson, David (Reader)
8On the edge of the Scythian wilderness…08:05
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 4
1Between the fall of the Heraclian and the rise…10:11
Timson, David (Reader)
2Leo the Fourth, the son of the fifth and the father…10:19
Timson, David (Reader)
3Many tyrants have reigned undoubtedly more criminal…10:34
Timson, David (Reader)
4The character of Theophilus is a rare example…10:11
Timson, David (Reader)
5The unnatural lusts which had degraded even the manhood…09:58
Timson, David (Reader)
6Yet under his reign the Roman arms were again formidable…09:43
Timson, David (Reader)
7The succeeding years of the minority of Constantine…09:18
Timson, David (Reader)
8Yet he imposed on a holy patriarch…09:14
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 5
1Of such a character, in such an age…10:23
Timson, David (Reader)
2The soldiers had served with reluctant loyalty…09:44
Timson, David (Reader)
3John Comnenus, the brother of the emperor Isaac…09:31
Timson, David (Reader)
4It was the wish of Irene to supplant the eldest…08:40
Timson, David (Reader)
5The story of his exploits, which appear as a model…09:13
Timson, David (Reader)
6At length he found the moment and the means…09:00
Timson, David (Reader)
7The patriarch laboured with honest zeal to heal the wounds…08:29
Timson, David (Reader)
8With the dawn of day the city burst into a general sedition…09:34
Timson, David (Reader)
9Chapter 4904:25
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 6
1But a memorial more interesting than the skull…11:22
Timson, David (Reader)
2The worship of images had stolen into the church…11:16
Timson, David (Reader)
3The scandal of an abstract heresy…09:24
Timson, David (Reader)
4Two original epistles, from Gregory the Second…10:20
Timson, David (Reader)
5To punish this flagitious deed…11:43
Timson, David (Reader)
6In his distress the first Gregory had implored the aid…10:53
Timson, David (Reader)
7II. In the change of manners and language…07:13
Timson, David (Reader)
8But in the rigid interpretation of the laws…06:56
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 7
1The emperors and the Romans were incapable…10:08
Timson, David (Reader)
2After the death of Theophilus the final victory…10:04
Timson, David (Reader)
3From his prison he escaped to the Vatican…09:41
Timson, David (Reader)
4The union and stability of his empire…09:56
Timson, David (Reader)
5V. He retaliated on the Avars, or Huns of Pannonia…10:29
Timson, David (Reader)
6Otho was of the noble race of the dukes of Saxony…10:10
Timson, David (Reader)
7Otho the First imposed a treaty on the senate…09:46
Timson, David (Reader)
8The alarum-bell rang to arms in every quarter…09:15
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 8
1Ambitious of restoring the splendour of the purple…11:04
Timson, David (Reader)
2It is in the fourteenth century that we may view…08:18
Timson, David (Reader)
3Chapter 5010:54
Timson, David (Reader)
4Arabia, in the opinion of the naturalist, is the genuine…09:01
Timson, David (Reader)
5The perpetual independence of the Arabs has been the theme…11:28
Timson, David (Reader)
6In the study of nations and men we may observe…10:12
Timson, David (Reader)
7The ferocious Bedoweens, the terror of the desert…08:48
Timson, David (Reader)
8From Japan to Peru, the use of sacrifice has universally…09:40
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 9
1The base and plebeian origin of Mohammed…09:50
Timson, David (Reader)
2He compares the nations and the religions of the earth…09:34
Timson, David (Reader)
3The God of nature has written his existence on all his works…12:04
Timson, David (Reader)
4The mission of the ancient prophets, of Moses and of Jesus…09:58
Timson, David (Reader)
5II. The voluntary penance of the ascetics…09:25
Timson, David (Reader)
6With the two simple elements of darkness and fire…10:33
Timson, David (Reader)
7The people of Mecca were hardened in their unbelief…10:03
Timson, David (Reader)
8From his establishment at Medina, Mohammed assumed…08:00
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 10
1From all sides the roving Arabs were allured…09:26
Timson, David (Reader)
2The choice of Jerusalem for the first kebla of prayer…10:39
Timson, David (Reader)
3The conquest of Mecca determined the faith and obedience…10:40
Timson, David (Reader)
4Till the age of sixty-three years, the strength of Mohammed…10:53
Timson, David (Reader)
5The injustice of Mecca and the choice of Medina…10:44
Timson, David (Reader)
6In the largest indulgence of polygamy…09:36
Timson, David (Reader)
7The mischiefs that flow from the contests of ambition…08:22
Timson, David (Reader)
8After this victory, which was styled the Day of the Camel…08:56
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 11
1He traversed the desert of Arabia…10:41
Timson, David (Reader)
2The talents of Mohammed are entitled to our applause…08:26
Timson, David (Reader)
3Chapter 5110:02
Timson, David (Reader)
4In the victorious days of the Roman republic…08:49
Timson, David (Reader)
5The indignation and fears of the Persians…10:35
Timson, David (Reader)
6In every age the foundation and ruin…10:19
Timson, David (Reader)
7After the fall of the Persian kingdom…08:26
Timson, David (Reader)
8One of the fifteen provinces of Syria, the cultivated lands…12:02
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 12
1In the presence of both armies a venerable Greek advanced…10:48
Timson, David (Reader)
2The hungry and cruel Arabs would have obeyed…01:57
Timson, David (Reader)
3Syria, one of the countries that have been improved…09:36
Timson, David (Reader)
4The exhortation of the generals was brief and forcible.09:46
Timson, David (Reader)
5To achieve what yet remained of the Syrian war…10:58
Timson, David (Reader)
6The sieges and battles of six campaigns…08:42
Timson, David (Reader)
7III. The conquest of Egypt may be explained…10:16
Timson, David (Reader)
8Yet the Arabs, after a glorious and profitable enterprise…07:17
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 13
1The efforts of the Arabs were not inadequate…10:04
Timson, David (Reader)
2A more destructive zeal may perhaps be attributed…11:13
Timson, David (Reader)
3Our reason must be startled by these extravagant assertions…09:59
Timson, David (Reader)
4On a sudden the charge was sounded…09:58
Timson, David (Reader)
5It had been the frequent practice of the Moorish tribes…09:50
Timson, David (Reader)
6Such is the tale of the modern Arabians.11:12
Timson, David (Reader)
7Before Musa would trust an army of the faithful…07:36
Timson, David (Reader)
8Count Julian had plunged so deep into guilt and infamy…08:39
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 14
1In the midway between Merida and Toledo…09:34
Timson, David (Reader)
2The resentment of the caliph might have been satiated…07:45
Timson, David (Reader)
3The wars of the Moslems were sanctified by the prophet…09:57
Timson, David (Reader)
4The Northern coast of Africa is the only land…12:56
Timson, David (Reader)
5Chapter 5208:11
Timson, David (Reader)
6The event of the siege revived, both in the East and West…10:45
Timson, David (Reader)
7The brother of Moslemah was succeeded by a kinsman…11:36
Timson, David (Reader)
8Constantinople and the Greek fire might exclude the Arabs…07:32
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 15
1A victorious line of march had been prolonged…09:03
Timson, David (Reader)
2The loss of an army, or a province…08:49
Timson, David (Reader)
3Yet the thousands who were swept away by the sword…11:57
Timson, David (Reader)
4In a private condition our desires are perpetually repressed…10:16
Timson, David (Reader)
5In the libraries of the Arabians, as in those of Europe…10:22
Timson, David (Reader)
6But the Moslems deprived themselves of the principal benefits…11:28
Timson, David (Reader)
7Under the reign of Almamon at Bagdad…08:08
Timson, David (Reader)
8In the sufferings of prostrate Italy…09:25
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 16
1The emperor Theophilus, son of Michael the Stammerer…08:20
Timson, David (Reader)
2With Motassem, the eighth of the Abbassides…10:59
Timson, David (Reader)
3The third and most obvious cause was the weight and magnitude…10:02
Timson, David (Reader)
4Under the mask of piety, the rigid followers of Hanbal…07:23
Timson, David (Reader)
5The sieges of Mopsuestia and Tarsus, In Cilicia…08:12
Timson, David (Reader)
6Chapter 5310:18
Timson, David (Reader)
7After the final division between the sons of Theodosius…10:22
Timson, David (Reader)
8In the time of Constantine Porphyrogenitus they had acquired…13:54
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 17
1But the toil and treasure of so many ages…09:25
Timson, David (Reader)
2But in every monarchy the substantial powers of government…10:25
Timson, David (Reader)
3In his regular or extraordinary processions…09:17
Timson, David (Reader)
4The example of maternal incontinence was copied…11:15
Timson, David (Reader)
5The principles of maritime tactics had not undergone…08:32
Timson, David (Reader)
6These scruples of the Greeks have been compared…10:00
Timson, David (Reader)
7A nation endowed with such high and intrepid spirit…10:18
Timson, David (Reader)
8In the ninth century we trace the first dawnings…09:14
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 18
1In the revolution of ten centuries, not a single discovery…06:17
Timson, David (Reader)
2Chapter 5409:23
Timson, David (Reader)
3Of the ecclesiastical chain, many links had been broken…11:50
Timson, David (Reader)
4The most furious and desperate of rebels…10:16
Timson, David (Reader)
5Alexius dissembled till the moment of revenge…09:33
Timson, David (Reader)
6A philosopher, who calculates the degree of their merit…11:22
Timson, David (Reader)
7Chapter 5510:45
Timson, David (Reader)
8The glory of the Bulgarians was confined…09:49
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 19
1From this primitive country they were driven to the West…11:32
Timson, David (Reader)
2After a long pilgrimage of flight or victory…10:07
Timson, David (Reader)
3The Hungarians were expected in the front…10:18
Timson, David (Reader)
4In the tenth century the geography of Scythia…09:40
Timson, David (Reader)
5The Greek appellation of monoxyla, or single canoes…11:32
Timson, David (Reader)
6Nicephorus could no longer expel the mischief…07:02
Timson, David (Reader)
7In the sacrament of baptism she received the venerable name…10:04
Timson, David (Reader)
8Chapter 5609:14
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 20
1On that day the scale of war was turned against the Franks…08:51
Timson, David (Reader)
2The establishment of the Normans in the kingdoms of Naples…10:23
Timson, David (Reader)
3Above twenty years after the first emigration…09:54
Timson, David (Reader)
4A harder trial was reserved for the valour of Count Humphrey…09:26
Timson, David (Reader)
5As the genius of Robert expanded with his fortune…10:15
Timson, David (Reader)
6Roger, the twelfth and last of the sons of Tancred…12:12
Timson, David (Reader)
7At the mouth of the Adriatic Gulf…07:00
Timson, David (Reader)
8The enumeration of provinces recalls a sad comparison…08:25
Timson, David (Reader)
Disc 21
1It is more than probable that Guiscard was not afflicted…09:51
Timson, David (Reader)
2The ruins of the Septizonium were still defended…10:22
Timson, David (Reader)
3Of human life, the most glorious or humble prospects…10:28
Timson, David (Reader)
4Since the decease of Robert Guiscard…09:26
Timson, David (Reader)
5The pride of Manuel disdained and rejected…10:15
Timson, David (Reader)
6The youth, innocence, and beauty of William the Second…09:21
Timson, David (Reader)

Total Playing Time: 27:09:24