Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome, written for a popular audience, uses the environment to explain the decline and fall of the Roman Empire. The book asserts that Rome fell as a result of environmental stress, in particular through a combination of pandemic disease and climate change. Although we agree that the environment can and should be integrated within traditional historical accounts, we challenge the book's claims on several issues. These include Harper's use of primary sources and secondary literature, his approach to analyzing palaeoclimate data, his interpretations of the impact of disease on the Roman state and society, and his synthesis of social, economic, and environmental history. Throughout this and the following two sections o...
Climate change over the past thousands of years is undeniable, but debate has arisen about its impac...
The Roman Empire was established in northwestern Europe in the last two centuries B.C. and the first...
Empirical thesis.Bibliography: pages 215-221.Introduction - Chapter One. Roman responses to natural ...
Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome, written for a popular audience, uses the environment to explain the ...
Abstract Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome, written for a popular audience, uses the environment to exp...
This is the last of a three‐part review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome. Here, we scrutinize Harpe...
This is the last of a three‐part review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome. Here, we scrutinize Harpe...
Abstract This is the last of a three-part review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome. Here, we scrutin...
Abstract This is the second of a three-section review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome in which we ...
This is the second of a three‐section review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome in which we examine i...
This is the second of a three‐section review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome in which we examine i...
In the past two centuries, the world has experienced radical change, ever since two superpowers, the...
This bibliometric analysis deals with research on the decline and fall of the Western Roman Empire i...
In the last few years, the study of extreme environmental phenomena has been gaining protagonism in ...
This master’s thesis addresses how climate and climate change may have affected the fall of the West...
Climate change over the past thousands of years is undeniable, but debate has arisen about its impac...
The Roman Empire was established in northwestern Europe in the last two centuries B.C. and the first...
Empirical thesis.Bibliography: pages 215-221.Introduction - Chapter One. Roman responses to natural ...
Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome, written for a popular audience, uses the environment to explain the ...
Abstract Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome, written for a popular audience, uses the environment to exp...
This is the last of a three‐part review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome. Here, we scrutinize Harpe...
This is the last of a three‐part review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome. Here, we scrutinize Harpe...
Abstract This is the last of a three-part review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome. Here, we scrutin...
Abstract This is the second of a three-section review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome in which we ...
This is the second of a three‐section review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome in which we examine i...
This is the second of a three‐section review of Kyle Harper's The Fate of Rome in which we examine i...
In the past two centuries, the world has experienced radical change, ever since two superpowers, the...
This bibliometric analysis deals with research on the decline and fall of the Western Roman Empire i...
In the last few years, the study of extreme environmental phenomena has been gaining protagonism in ...
This master’s thesis addresses how climate and climate change may have affected the fall of the West...
Climate change over the past thousands of years is undeniable, but debate has arisen about its impac...
The Roman Empire was established in northwestern Europe in the last two centuries B.C. and the first...
Empirical thesis.Bibliography: pages 215-221.Introduction - Chapter One. Roman responses to natural ...