In the Footsteps of Rome: Is Renewal Possible?

Once the shared memories of these values are lost, the Empire ceases to exist; there is nothing left to reform or renew.
Is renewal / recovery from systemic decline possible? The history of the Roman Empire is a potentially insightful place to start looking for answers. As long-time readers know, I’ve been studying both the Western and Eastern (Byzantine) Roman Empires over the past few years. Both Western and Eastern Roman Empires faced existential crises that very nearly dissolved the empires hundreds of years before their terminal declines. The Western Roman Empire, beset by the overlapping crises of invasion, civil war, plague and economic upheaval, nearly collapsed in the third century C. E. (Christian Era, what was previously A. D.) — 235 to 284 C. E., fully two hundred years before its final dissolution in the fifth century (circa 476 C. E.). Meanwhile, the Eastern Roman Empire (Byzantine Empire) faced similar crises in the seventh and eighth centuries, as its capital of Constantinople was besieged by the Persians in 626 C. E. and the Arab caliphate in 674 C. E. and again in 717 C. E. The invasions which preceded the sieges stripped the empire of wealthy territories and the income those lands produced.

This post was published at Charles Hugh Smith on SUNDAY, JULY 23, 2017.