<p><strong>"Chris Doyle takes up an unenviable task in reviewing the life and reign of the much-despised emperor Honorius. His study presents a very good and much fairer evaluation of this controversial ruler, bringing him out from under the shadow of his general Stilicho and his sister Galla Placidia, and showing how he survived and preserved the western Roman Empire for nearly 30 years against long odds."</strong> - <em>Richard Billows, Columbia University, USA</em></p><p><strong>"Doyle's <i>Honorius</i> is an excellent Imperial biography. He offers a profound and thought-provoking treatment of one of Rome's most misunderstood emperors who stood watch during a critical time in its history. Doyle's <i>Honorius</i> offers appeal to a broad audience and rightly deserves wide readership among scholars and students of Late Antiquity."</strong> - <em>Classical Journal</em></p><p><strong>"As a synopsis, Doyle's Honorius biography undoubtedly has its value and complements the research on the political history of late antiquity, which rarely devotes attention to the Western Roman Emperor Honorius."</strong> - <em>Bryn Mawr Classical Review</em></p><p><strong>" Doyle writes vividly and sprinkles his prose with humour."</strong> <em>- Plekos, 2019</em></p><p><strong>"Chris Doyle provides a short and easy-to-read overview of the life and times of this notorious late Roman emperor... a wide-ranging overview of the Roman world in the early fifth century C.E. using a diverse body of evidence."</strong> - <em>The Journal of Roman Studies</em></p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Chris Doyle currently lectures in Ancient and Medieval History at the National University of Ireland, Galway, Republic of Ireland. He is interested in the art and religion of the late antique period, and has published on stylistic developments in late Roman coinage. He is presently working on two books: a study of rebellion and dissent during the Christianization of the Roman world; and a biography based on his grandmother’s experiences as a frontline nurse with the British army in North Africa, Italy, and Greece during the Second World War.