BY WILL DURANT
   The Story of Philosophy
   Transition
   The Pleasure of Philosophy
   Adventures in Genius
   BY WILL AND ARIEL DURANT
   THE STORY OF CIVILIZATION
   1. Our Oriental Heritage
   2. The Life of Greece
   3. Caesar and Christ
   4. The Age of Faith
   5. The Renaissance
   6. The Reformation
   7. The Age of Reason Begins
   8. The Age of Louis XIV
   9. The Age of Voltaire
   10. Rousseau and Revolution
   11. The Age of Napoleon
   The Lessons of History
   Interpretation of Life
   A Dual Autobiography
   COPYRIGHT 1950 BY WILL DURANT
   ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
   INCLUDING THE RIGHT OF REPRODUCTION
   IN WHOLE OR IN PART IN ANY FORM
   PUBLISHED BY SIMON AND SCHUSTER
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   SIMON AND SCHUSTER AND COLOPHON ARE TRADEMARKS OF SIMON & SCHUSTER
   ISBN 0-671-01200-1
   eISBN-13: 978-1-45164-761-7
   LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOG CARD NUMBER 35-10016
   MANUFACTURED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
   TO ETHEL, GORDON, AND JIM
   To the Reader
   THIS book aims to give as full and fair an account of medieval civilization from A.D. 325 to 1300, as space and prejudice will permit. Its method is integral history—the presentation of all phases of a culture or an age in one total picture and narrative. The obligation to cover the economic, political, legal, military, moral, social, religious, educational, scientific, medical, philosophic, literary, and artistic aspects of four distinct civilizations—Byzantine, Islamic, Judaic, and West European—has made unification and brevity difficult. The meeting and conflict of the four cultures in the Crusades provides a measure of unity; and the tired reader, appalled by the length of the book, may find some consolation in learning that the original manuscript was half again longer than the present text.* Nothing has been retained except what seemed necessary to the proper understanding of the period, or to the life and color of the tale. Nevertheless certain recondite passages, indicated by reduced type, may be omitted by the general reader without mortal injury.
   These two volumes constitute Part IV of a history of civilization. Part I, Our Oriental Heritage (1935), reviewed the history of Egypt and the Near East to their conquest by Alexander about 330 B.C., and of India, China, and Japan to the present century. Part II, The Life of Greece (1939), recorded the career and culture of Hellas and the Near East to the Roman Conquest of Greece in 146 B.C. Part III, Caesar and Christ (1944), surveyed the history of Rome and Christianity from their beginnings, and of the Near East from 146 B.C., to the Council of Nicaea in A.D. 325. This book continues the study of the white man’s life to the death of Dante in 1321. Part V, The Renaissance and the Reformation, covering the period from 1321 to 1648, should appear in 1955; and Part VI, The Age of Reason, carrying the story to our own time, should be ready by 1960. This will bring the author so close to senility that he must forgo the privilege of applying the integral method to the two Americas.
   Each of these volumes is designed as an independent unit, but readers familiar with Caesar and Christ will find it easier to pick up the threads of the present narrative. Chronology compels us to begin with those facets of the quadripartite medieval civilization which are most remote from our normal interest—the Byzantine and the Islamic. The Christian reader will be surprised by the space given to the Moslem culture, and the Moslem scholar will mourn the brevity with which the brilliant civilization of medieval Islam has here been summarized. A persistent effort has been made to be impartial, to see each faith and culture from its own point of view. But prejudice has survived, if only in the selection of material and the allotment of space. The mind, like the body, is imprisoned in its skin.
   The manuscript has been written three times, and each rewriting has discovered errors. Many must still remain; the improvement of the part is sacrificed to the completion of the whole. The correction of errors will be welcomed.
   Grateful acknowledgment is due to Dr. Use Lichtenstadter, of the Asia Institute of New York, for reading the pages on Islamic civilization; to Dr. Bernard Mandelbaum, of the Jewish Theological Seminary of America, for reviewing the pages on medieval Jewry; to Professor Lynn Thorndike, of Columbia University, for the use of his translation of a passage from Alexander Neckham; to the Cambridge University Press for permission to quote translations from Edward G. Browne’s A Literary History of Persia; to the Public Library of Los Angeles, and specifically to its Hollywood Branch, and to the Library of Congress, for the loan of books; to Miss Rose Mary DeWitte for typing 50,000 notes; to Dr. James L. Whitehead, Dr. C. Edward Hopkin, and Mrs. Will Durant for their learned aid in classifying the material; to Misses Mary and Flora Kaufman for varied assistance; and to Mrs. Edith Digate for her high competence in typing the manuscript.
   This book, like all its predecessors, should have been dedicated to my wife, who for thirty-seven years has given me a patient toleration, protection, guidance, and inspiration that not all these volumes could repay. It is at her prompting that these two volumes are dedicated to our daughter, son-in-law, and grandson.
   WILL DURANT
   November 22, 1949
   Table of Contents
   BOOK I: THE BYZANTINE ZENITH: A.D. 325–565
   Chronological Table
   Chapter I. JULIAN THE APOSTATE: 332–63
   I. The Legacy of Constantine
   II. Christians and Pagans
   III. The New Caesar
   IV. The Pagan Emperor
   V. Journey’s End
   Chapter II. THE TRIUMPH OF THE BARBARIANS: 325–476
   I. The Threatened Frontier
   II. The Savior Emperors
   III. Italian Background
   IV. The Barbarian Flood
   V. The Fall of Rome
   Chapter III. THE PROGRESS OF CHRISTIANITY: 364–451
   I. The Organization of the Church
   II. The Heretics
   III. The Christian West
   1. Rome
   2. St. Jerome
   3. Christian Soldiers
   IV. The Christian East
   1. The Monks of the East
   2. The Eastern Bishops
   V. St. Augustine
   1. The Sinner
   2. The Theologian
   3. The Philosopher
   4. The Patriarch
   VI. The Church and the World
   Chapter IV. EUROPE TAKES FORM: 325–529
   I. Britain Becomes England
   II. Ireland
   III. Prelude to France
   1. The Last Days of Classic Gaul
   2. The Franks
   3. The Merovingians
   IV. Visigothic Spain
   V. Ostrogothic Italy
   1. Theodoric
   2. Boethius
   Chapter V. JUSTINIAN: 527–65
   I. The Emperor
   II. Theodora
   III. Belisarius
   IV. The Code of Justinian
   V. The Imperial Theologian
   Chapter VI. BYZANTINE CIVILIZATION: 337–565
   I. Work and Wealth
   II. Science and Philosophy
   III. Literature
   IV. Byzantine Art
   1. The Passage from Paganism
   2. The Byzantine Artist
   3. St. Sophia
   4. From  
					     					 			Constantinople to Ravenna
   5. The Byzantine Arts
   Chapter VII. THE PERSIANS: 224–641
   I. Sasanian Society
   II. Sasanian Royalty
   III. Sasanian Art
   IV. The Arab Conquest
   BOOK II: ISLAMIC CIVILIZATION: A.D. 569–1258
   Chronological Table
   Chapter VIII. MOHAMMED: 569–632
   I. Arabia
   II. Mohammed in Mecca
   III. Mohammed in Medina
   IV. Mohammed Victorious
   Chapter IX. THE KORAN
   I. Form
   II. Creed
   III. Ethics
   IV. Religion and the State
   V. Sources of the Koran
   Chapter X. THE SWORD OF ISLAM: 632–1058
   I. The Successors
   II. The Umayyad Caliphate
   III. The Abbasid Caliphate
   1. Harun al-Rashid
   2. Decline of the Abbasids
   IV. Armenia
   Chapter XI. THE ISLAMIC SCENE: 632–1058
   I. The Economy
   II. The Faith
   III. The People
   IV. The Government
   V. The Cities
   Chapter XII. THOUGHT AND ART IN EASTERN ISLAM: 632–1058
   I. Scholarship
   II. Science
   III. Medicine
   IV. Philosophy
   V. Mysticism and Heresy
   VI. Literature
   VII. Art
   VIII. Music
   Chapter XIII. WESTERN ISLAM: 641–1086
   I. The Conquest of Africa
   II. Islamic Civilization in Africa
   III. Islam in the Mediterranean
   IV. Spanish Islam
   1. Caliphs and Emirs
   2. Civilization in Moorish Spain
   Chapter XIV. THE GRANDEUR AND DECLINE OF ISLAM: 1058–1258
   I. The Islamic East
   II. The Islamic West
   III. Glimpses of Islamic Art
   IV. The Age of Omar Khayyam
   V. The Age of Sa’di
   VI. Moslem Science
   VII. Al-Ghazali
   VIII. Averroës
   IX. The Coming of the Mongols
   X. Islam and Christendom
   BOOK III: JUDAIC CIVILIZATION: A.D. 135–1300
   Chronological Table
   Chapter XV. THE TALMUD: 135–500
   I. The Exiles
   II. The Makers of the Talmud
   III. The Law
   1. Theology
   2. Ritual
   3. Ethics of the Talmud
   IV. Life and the Law
   Chapter XVI. THE MEDIEVAL JEWS: 500–1300
   I. The Oriental Communities
   II. The European Communities
   III. Jewish Life
   1. Government
   2. Economy
   3. Morals
   4. Religion
   IV. Anti-Semitism
   Chapter XVII. THE MIND AND HEART OF THE JEW: 500–1300
   I. Letters
   II. The Adventures of the Talmud
   III. Science Among the Jews
   IV. The Rise of Jewish Philosophy
   V. Maimonides
   VI. The Maimonidean War
   VII. The Cabala
   VIII. Release
   BOOK IV: THE DARK AGES: A.D. 566–1095
   Chronological Table
   Chapter XVIII. THE BYZANTINE WORLD: 566–1095
   I. Heraclius
   II. The Iconoclasts
   III. Imperial Kaleidoscope
   IV. Byzantine Life
   V. The Byzantine Renaissance
   VI. The Balkans
   VII. The Birth of Russia
   Chapter XIX. THE DECLINE OF THE WEST: 566–1066
   I. Italy
   1. The Lombards
   2. The Normans in Italy
   3. Venice
   4. Italian Civilization
   II. Christian Spain
   III. France
   1. The Coming of the Carolingians
   2. Charlemagne
   3. The Carolingian Decline
   4. Letters and Arts
   5. The Rise of the Dukes
   Chapter XX. THE RISE OF THE NORTH: 566–1066
   I. England
   1. Alfred and the Danes
   2. Anglo-Saxon Civilization
   3. Between Conquests
   II. Wales
   III. Irish Civilization
   IV. Scotland
   V. The Northmen
   1. The Kings’ Saga
   2. Viking Civilization
   VI. Germany
   1. The Organization of Power
   2. German Civilization
   Chapter XXI. CHRISTIANITY IN CONFLICT: 529–1085
   I. St. Benedict
   II. Gregory the Great
   III. Papal Politics
   IV. The Greek Church
   V. The Christian Conquest of Europe
   VI. The Nadir of the Papacy
   VII. The Reform of the Church
   VIII. The Great Eastern Schism
   IX. Gregory VII Hildebrand
   Chapter XXII. FEUDALISM AND CHIVALRY: 600–1200
   I. Feudal Origins
   II. Feudal Organization
   1. The Slave
   2. The Serf
   3. The Village Community
   4. The Lord
   5. The Feudal Church
   6. The King
   III. Feudal Law
   IV. Feudal War
   V. Chivalry
   BOOK V: THE CLIMAX OF CHRISTIANITY: A.D. 1095–1300
   Chronological Table
   Chapter XXIII. THE CRUSADES: 1095–1291
   I. Causes
   II. The First Crusade
   III. The Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem
   IV. The Second Crusade
   V. Saladin
   VI. The Third Crusade
   VII. The Fourth Crusade
   VIII. The Collapse of the Crusades
   IX. The Results of the Crusades
   Chapter XXIV. THE ECONOMIC REVOLUTION: 1066–1300
   I. The Revival of Commerce
   II. The Progress of Industry
   III. Money
   IV. Interest
   V. The Guilds
   VI. The Communes
   VII. The Agricultural Revolution
   VIII. The Class War
   Chapter XXV. THE RECOVERY OF EUROPE: 1095–1300
   I. Byzantium
   II. The Armenians
   III. Russia and the Mongols
   IV. The Balkan Flux
   V. The Border States
   VI. Germany
   VII. Scandinavia
   VIII. England
   1. William the Conqueror
   2. Thomas à Becket
   3. Magna Carta
   4. The Growth of the Law
   5. The English Scene
   IX. Ireland—Scotland—Wales
   X. The Rhinelands
   XI. France
   1. Philip Augustus
   2. St. Louis
   3. Philip the Fair
   XII. Spain
   XIII. Portugal
   Chapter XXVI. PRE-RENAISSANCE ITALY: 1057–1308
   I. Norman Sicily
   II. The Papal States
   III. Venice Triumphant
   IV. From Mantua to Genoa
   V. Frederick II
   1. The Excommunicate Crusader
   2. The Wonder of the World
   3. Empire vs. Papacy
   VI. The Dismemberment of Italy
   VII. The Rise of Florence
   Chapter XXVII. THE ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH: 1095–1294
   I. The Faith of the People
   II. The Sacraments
   III. Prayer
   IV. Ritual
   V. Canon Law
   VI. The Clergy
   VII. The Papacy Supreme
   VIII. The Finances of the Church
   Chapter XXVIII. THE EARLY INQUISITION: 1000–1300
   I. The Albigensian Heresy
   II. The Background of the In 
					     					 			quisition
   III. The Inquisitors
   IV. Results
   Chapter XXIX. MONKS AND FRIARS: 1095–1300
   I. The Monastic Life
   II. St. Bernard
   III. St. Francis
   IV. St. Dominic
   V. The Nuns
   VI. The Mystics
   VII. The Tragic Pope
   VII. Retrospect
   Chapter XXX. THE MORALS AND MANNERS OF CHRISTENDOM: 700–1300
   I. The Christian Ethic
   II. Premarital Morality
   III. Marriage
   IV. Woman
   V. Public Morality
   VI. Medieval Dress
   VII. In the Home
   VIII. Society and Sport
   IX. Morality and Religion
   Chapter XXXI. THE RESURRECTION OF THE ARTS: 1095–1300
   I. The Esthetic Awakening
   II. The Adornment of Life
   III. Painting
   1. Mosaic
   2. Miniatures
   3. Murals
   4. Stained Glass
   IV. Sculpture
   Chapter XXXII. THE GOTHIC FLOWERING: 1095–1300
   I. The Cathedral
   II. Continental Romanesque
   III. The Norman Style in England
   IV. The Evolution of Gothic
   V. French Gothic
   VI. English Gothic
   VII. German Gothic
   VIII. Italian Gothic
   IX. Spanish Gothic
   X. Considerations
   Chapter XXXIII. MEDIEVAL MUSIC: 326–1300
   I. The Music of the Church
   II. The Music of the People
   Chapter XXXIV. THE TRANSMISSION OF KNOWLEDGE: 1000–1300
   I. The Rise of the Vernaculars
   II. The World of Books
   III. The Translators
   IV. The Schools
   V. Universities of the South
   VI. Universities of France
   VII. Universities of England
   VIII. Student Life
   Chapter XXXV. ABÉLARD: 1079–1142
   I. Divine Philosophy
   II. Héloïse
   III. The Rationalist
   IV. The Letters of Heloise
   V. The Condemned
   Chapter XXXVI. THE ADVENTURE OF REASON: 1120–1308
   I. The School of Chartres
   II. Aristotle in Paris
   III. The Freethinkers
   IV. The Development of Scholasticism
   V. Thomas Aquinas
   VI. The Thomist Philosophy
   1. Logic
   2. Metaphysics
   3. Theology
   4. Psychology
   5. Ethics
   6. Politics
   7. Religion
   8. The Reception of Thomism
   VII. The Successors
   Chapter XXXVII. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE: 1095–1300
   I. The Magical Environment
   II. The Mathematical Revolution