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Part II
Copyright © 2014. ISI Books. All rights reserved.
The Not-So-Dark Ages
(500–1200)
67
Stark, Rodney. How the West Won : The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity, ISI Books, 2014. ProQuest Ebook
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Copyright © 2014. ISI Books. All rights reserved.
Stark, Rodney. How the West Won : The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity, ISI Books, 2014. ProQuest Ebook
Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/lynnu/detail.action?docID=3316210.
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4
g
The Blessings of Disunity
Copyright © 2014. ISI Books. All rights reserved.
I
n response to the long-prevailing absurdities about how the fall
of Rome plunged Europe into the “Dark Ages,” some historians
now propose that very little happened after the Western Empire
collapsed—that the “world of Late Antiquity,” as Peter Brown has identified the era from 150 to 750,1 was one of slow transformation. Brown is,
of course, correct that the history of these centuries can be told “without
invoking an intervening catastrophe and without pausing, for a moment,
to pay lip service to the widespread notion of decay.”2 But to deny decay
does not require the denial of change.
The fall of Rome was, in fact, the most beneficial event in the rise of
Western civilization, precisely because it unleashed so many substantial
and progressive changes.
This chapter will examine the dramatic progress that began after
Roman unity fell apart. Europe in this era was blessed with lasting disunity; periodic efforts to reestablish empires failed. Disunity enabled
extensive, small-scale social experimentation and unleashed creative
competition among hundreds of independent political units, which, in
turn, resulted in rapid and profound progress. Thus, just as the Greek
“miracle” arose from disunity, so too “European civilization . . . owes its
origins and raison d’être to political anarchy,” as Nobel Prize winner F. A.
Hayek explained.3
Not surprisingly, most of the early innovations and inventions came
in agriculture. Soon most medieval Europeans ate better than had any
69
Stark, Rodney. How the West Won : The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity, ISI Books, 2014. ProQuest Ebook
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HOW T HE W EST WON
common people in history, and consequently they grew larger and stronger than people elsewhere.4 They also harnessed water and wind power
to a revolutionary extent. In addition, faced with constant warfare among
themselves, medieval Europeans excelled at inventing and adopting
new military technology and tactics, all of them consistent with the
Western principles of warfare initiated by the ancient Greeks. In 732,
when Muslim invaders drove into Gaul, they encountered an army of
superbly armed and trained Franks and were destroyed. Subsequently,
the Franks conquered most of Europe and installed a new emperor. Fortunately, the whole thing soon fell apart and Europe’s creative disunity
was reestablished.
Copyright © 2014. ISI Books. All rights reserved.
The Myth of the Dark Ages
Belief in the Dark Ages remains so persistent that it seems appropriate
to begin this chapter by quickly revealing that this is a myth made up by
eighteenth-century intellectuals determined to slander Christianity and
to celebrate their own sagacity.5
It has long been the “informed” opinion that after the fall of Rome
came many centuries during which ascendant Christianity imposed an
era of ignorance and superstition all across Europe. In her long-admired
study of medieval philosophers, The Age of Belief (1954), Anne Fremantle
wrote of “a dark, dismal patch, a sort of dull and dirty chunk of some
ten centuries.”6 Fremantle’s assertion merely echoed the anti-Christian
fulminations of various eighteenth-century dissenters. Voltaire described
the era following Rome as one when “barbarism, superstition, [and] ignorance covered the face of the world.”7 According to Rousseau, “Europe
had relapsed into the barbarism of the earliest ages. The people of this
part of the world . . . lived some centuries ago in a condition worse than
ignorance.”8 Edward Gibbon called the fall of Rome the “triumph of
barbarism and religion.”9
More recently, Bertrand Russell, writing in the illustrated edition
of his famous college textbook (1959), declared: “As the central authority of Rome decayed, the lands of the Western Empire began to sink
into an era of barbarism during which Europe suffered a general cultural
decline. The Dark Ages, as they are called.”10 In 1991 Charles Van Doren
earned praise for his book A History of Knowledge, in which he noted
Stark, Rodney. How the West Won : The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity, ISI Books, 2014. ProQuest Ebook
Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/lynnu/detail.action?docID=3316210.
Created from lynnu on 2020-05-18 15:55:44.
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Copyright © 2014. ISI Books. All rights reserved.
T he Blessings of Disun it y
71
that the fall of Rome had “plunged Europe into a Dark Age that lasted
for five hundred years.” It was an age of “rapine and death,” since “there
was little law except that of force.” Worse yet, “life had become hard,
with most people dependent on what they could scratch with their hands
from the earth around their homes.”11 Van Doren blamed Christianity
for prolonging this dismal era by disdaining consumption and the material world while celebrating poverty and urging contentment.12 In 1993
the highly respected historian William Manchester summed up his views
of the period “AD 400 and AD 1000” in his book title: A World Lit Only
by Fire. He dismissed those who no longer believed in the Dark Ages on
grounds that “most of what is known about the period is unlovely. . . .
The portrait that emerges is a mélange of incessant warfare, corruption,
lawlessness, obsession with strange myths, and an almost impenetrable
mindlessness.”13
Nevertheless, serious historians have known for decades that these
claims are a complete fraud. Even the respectable encyclopedias and dictionaries now define the Dark Ages as a myth. The Columbia Encyclopedia
rejects the term, noting that “medieval civilization is no longer thought
to have been so dim.” Britannica disdains the name Dark Ages as “pejorative.” And Wikipedia defines the Dark Ages as “a supposed period
of intellectual darkness after the fall of Rome.” These views are easily
verified.
There may have been some serious, but short-lived, dislocations associated with the collapse of Roman rule and the organization of new local
political units. But the myth of the Dark Ages posits many centuries of
ignorant misery based on four primary factors: (1) most cities were abandoned and fell into ruin; (2) trade collapsed, throwing local communities
onto their own, very limited resources; (3) literacy all but disappeared;
and (4) the standard of living of the average person fell to a bare subsistence level.
It is true that Roman cities and towns declined greatly in number and
size after the fall of Rome. The population of the city of Rome dropped
from about five hundred thousand in the year 400 to about fifty thousand
in 600. Of 372 Roman cities in Italy listed by Pliny, a third disappeared
soon after the fall.14 Many towns and cities in Gaul and Britain “became
like ghost towns, with small populations,” according to Roger Osborne
in Civilization.15 All told, most of the empire’s estimated 2,000 “cities”
(mostly towns) suffered this fate.16
Stark, Rodney. How the West Won : The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity, ISI Books, 2014. ProQuest Ebook
Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/lynnu/detail.action?docID=3316210.
Created from lynnu on 2020-05-18 15:55:44.
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Copyright © 2014. ISI Books. All rights reserved.
72
HOW T HE W EST WON
But these changes did not mean that the West had slid into
backwardness. The truth is that most Roman cities no longer served any
purpose. They had been funded by the state and existed only for governing: for collecting taxes, administering local rule, and quartering troops.
As Osborne noted, “they were centres of consumption, not production,
and had no autonomous reason for existence.”17 In contrast, the towns
that arose or survived in post-Roman Europe were centers of trade and
manufacturing—as were the many towns in the “barbarian” North,
which continued to flourish. The towns and cities of this new era tended
not to be large, because there were no state subsidies to pay for daily distributions of free food and entertainment for idle masses. Those people
“now were not fed at all unless they made shift to feed themselves,” as the
historian A. R. Bridbury put it.18
Surely this was a major change. Just as surely, it was not decay.
With the demise of the fabulously rich Roman elite, the luxury trade
bringing exotic food, jewels, and cloth from distant sources may have
declined. But proponents of the Dark Ages myth propose that all forms
of trade soon disappeared: in Van Doren’s words, “the roads were empty
of travelers and freight.”19 But it wasn’t so—there was far more European
trade after the fall. For one thing, although the Romans transported a
lot of goods, it wasn’t really trade but merely “a traffic in rent and tribute,” in Robin Williams-McClanahan’s apt phrase.20 Coins and precious
metals, food, slaves, and luxury goods flowed to Rome; little came back
except tax collectors and soldiers. As Bridbury explained, Roman trade
“did not generate income, it simply impoverished those from whom it
was extorted.”21 Second, long before the fall of Rome the “barbarian”
areas had established very active, dense, long-distance trade networks, 22
and these not only survived but soon were extended south and westward.
Post-Roman Europe sustained busy trade networks dealing in practical
things such as iron tools and weapons, pottery, glassware, and woolens.
Most of these items were well within the means of ordinary people, and
some of the goods traveled several thousand miles.23
“Everyone” knows that the fall of Rome soon resulted in an age of
illiteracy. No doubt most people in the post-Roman world were unable
to read or write. But this was nothing new: literacy was probably below
5 percent during the days of the empire as well.24 It also is true that after
the fall, fewer people wrote in Latin or Greek—since they did not speak
them either. Meanwhile, many of the “barbarian” tongues already were,
Stark, Rodney. How the West Won : The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity, ISI Books, 2014. ProQuest Ebook
Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/lynnu/detail.action?docID=3316210.
Created from lynnu on 2020-05-18 15:55:44.
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Copyright © 2014. ISI Books. All rights reserved.
T he Blessings of Disun it y
73
or soon became, written languages. For example, written Gothic dates
from the fourth century and Old English from about the fifth.
As for the average person’s standard of living, it is true that the state
no longer subsidized food or made daily free distributions of bread, olive
oil, and wine. But studies based on isotopic analysis of skeletons have
found that people in the so-called Dark Ages ate very well, getting lots
of meat, and as a result they grew larger than people had during the days
of the empire.25
Finally, the Germanic North had already been “Romanized,” even
though it lay outside the empire. The historian Alfons Dopsch demonstrated that by the end of the first century the Germanic societies “had
acquired most of the attributes of a fully articulated economic civilisation, including the use of coinage and the dependence on trade.”26 Moreover, when the Goths and Franks and other Germanic peoples took up
residence in the empire, or later in what had been parts of the empire,
they quickly assimilated. Thus it is that nowhere in modern Europe does
anyone speak Frankish or Gothic. Instead, millions speak French, Spanish, and Italian—the Romance languages, which are, of course, merely
“low” forms of Latin. This shift occurred very early.
What did decline during the so-called Dark Ages were literary pursuits. Manchester expressed the common theme: “Intellectual life had
vanished from Europe.”27 In fact, little writing on any subject survives. As
a result, echoing generations of scholars, the famous nineteenth-century
artist Howard Pyle could complain, “Few records remain to us of that
dreadful period in our world’s history, and we only know of it through
broken and disjointed fragments.”28 Although some writing from that era
may have been lost, it appears that far less was written for several centuries after the fall of Rome than before or since.
Why? In large part because the wealthy leisure class inherent in
the parasitical nature of the imperial system had fallen away. Under the
empire, the immense wealth drained from the provinces had sustained
the idle rich in Rome. When this flow of tribute disappeared, so did the
leisure class. There ended up being far fewer persons who did not need
to work for their livings and who had the leisure to devote themselves
to writing and other “nonproductive” enterprises. It was a few centuries
before the reappearance of persons free to produce artistic and literary
works.
For generations of scholars, that alone was sufficient to call an era
Stark, Rodney. How the West Won : The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity, ISI Books, 2014. ProQuest Ebook
Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/lynnu/detail.action?docID=3316210.
Created from lynnu on 2020-05-18 15:55:44.
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HOW T HE W EST WON
“dark,” even if it was abundant in new technology—which these scholars
probably would not have noticed in any event.
Copyright © 2014. ISI Books. All rights reserved.
The Geography of Disunity
The map of medieval Europe’s independent political units looks remarkably like a map of primitive cultures occupying this same area in
3000 BC.29 That is because the geography proved inimical to unification. Europe was, in E. L. Jones’s words, “a scatter of regions of high
arable potential set in a continent of wastes and forests.”30 Unlike China
or India, it was not one large plain but a multitude of fertile valleys surrounded by mountains and dense forests, each often serving as the core
area of an independent state. Only a few sizable plains, such as those
surrounding Paris and London, could easily sustain larger political units;
the rest of the political units that developed were tiny—statelets is the
appropriate term. We lack sufficient information to count the states and
statelets of the early post-Roman period, but as late as the fourteenth
century there were more than a thousand independent units spread across
Europe.31 Even today there are more than thirty.
Europe’s geographic barriers created not only many political units
but cultural and linguistic diversity too, which also impeded efforts at
unification. It should be remembered that Rome was able to impose
its rule on far less than half of Europe—only the area southwest of the
Rhine and the Danube Rivers. Even in Britain, Hadrian’s Wall separated
the Roman area from that of the northern tribes. Within the empire, the
Mediterranean substituted for a great plain facilitating central control
from Rome. That is, Rome was essentially a waterfront empire encircling the great inland sea, and most Roman travel and trade was by boat.
It is doubtful that the Romans could have controlled either Spain or the
Levant had the legions been required to invade and supply themselves
entirely by land. And once Rome fell, both areas splintered back into
many small units.
Unlike Rome, however, most of Europe did not depend on the Mediterranean for waterborne tradeways. It had an immense advantage over
Asia and Africa because of what Jones called “an abnormally high ratio
of navigable routeways to surface area, which was a function of a long
indented coastline and many navigable rivers.”32
Stark, Rodney. How the West Won : The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity, ISI Books, 2014. ProQuest Ebook
Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/lynnu/detail.action?docID=3316210.
Created from lynnu on 2020-05-18 15:55:44.
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T he Blessings of Disun it y
75
Copyright © 2014. ISI Books. All rights reserved.
Migrations and Disunity
Our knowledge of the migrations of various groups into and across
Europe is a confused mess. Most of the groups left no written accounts of
their movements; the Roman reports are often wrong and almost always
biased; modern archaeology has challenged a lot of what we thought we
knew.
For example, every British schoolchild knows about the invasion of
the Angles and Saxons, two related Germanic peoples who arrived in
England during the fifth century and took over, as demonstrated by the
fact that their language (Old English) soon dominated. In fact, the word
England means “land of the Angles.” The Anglo-Saxons’ arrival in England and their rise to power is carefully attested by the Venerable Bede
(672–735) in his esteemed Ecclesiastical History of the English People.
But archaeologists now challenge the claim that a substantial AngloSaxon migration took place.33 As archaeology professor Peter S. Wells
has documented, isotope studies of skeletons in what everyone has
regarded as Anglo-Saxon cemeteries show “consistently that the individuals, whom earlier investigators would have interpreted as immigrants from the continent, were in fact local people.” Anthropologists
now believe that the famous migrations “rarely, if ever, involved the large
numbers that many accounts indicate, especially in western and northern
Europe.” Instead, it now is believed that “small groups of elites, often
with bands of their loyal warriors, sometimes moved from one region
to another and quickly asserted their power over the peoples into whose
land they moved.”34 That is, after the arrival of elite groups of Angles and
Saxons, most people in England became Anglo-Saxons—or at least their
descendants soon did.35
Obviously there were various “barbarian” groups on the borders of
the Roman Empire. Obviously, too, many of these groups were large
enough to pose a serious threat to Roman areas. And clearly some of
them did enter the empire in large numbers as Roman rule faltered—the
Ostrogoths and Visigoths, for example. But in the post-Roman period,
it is difficult to know whether large groups, or only elites, were involved
in migrations. During the fifth century, did great Frankish migrations
occur into northern Gaul, or did Frankish warrior elites simply carve out
many small kingdoms populated by locals? Whatever the case, cultural
diversity increased dramatically, which increased disunity.
Stark, Rodney. How the West Won : The Neglected Story of the Triumph of Modernity, ISI Books, 2014. ProQuest Ebook
Central, http://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/lynnu/detail.action?docID=3316210.
Created from lynnu on 2020-05-18 15:55:44.
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HOW T HE W EST WON
The proliferation of European political units had several importan ...
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