An Unofficial 'The Rest Is History' Reading List

Edward Gibbon

1 book referenced

Books by Edward Gibbon

The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire

Referenced in 18 episodes

522. Warlords of the West: A Clash of Ice and Fire (Part 3)

December 16, 2024

Context:

Explicitly quoted at the beginning of the episode, described as 'one of the most famous passages of historical prose ever written,' discussing Gibbon's view on the Battle of Tours and Charles Martel

507. The French Revolution: The Marseillaise, Song of War (Part 5)

October 24, 2024

Context:

Referenced as an example of Enlightenment culture's fascination with Rome, noting that Gibbon cast the Christian period as a dark age.

460. The Empress of the Apocalypse

June 12, 2024

Context:

Referenced when discussing the 'pornocracy' period of the papacy and Marozia's influence. A passage is quoted from Gibbon about Marozia's descendants who became popes.

412. Romans in Space: Star Wars, Dune and Beyond...

January 25, 2024

Context:

Referenced multiple times as the influential historical work that inspired science fiction. Mentioned that Gibbon 'moved in circles where people were dissing luxury and dissing ambition and corruption' and his famous quote about the fall of Rome being 'the greatest, perhaps, and most awful scene in the history of mankind.'

403. The Mystery of the Pregnant Pope

December 28, 2023

Context:

Gibbon is mentioned as the 'great author of The Decline of the Roman Empire' in the context of discussing his commentary on the pornocracy period and Pope Joan legend, noting that 'there was nothing he enjoyed more than popes behaving badly.'

PAX: War and Peace in Rome’s Golden Age (Extract)

September 18, 2023

Context:

Explicitly referenced as Gibbon's 1776 work in which he defined the reigns of Hadrian and his predecessors/successors as 'the period in the history of the world during which the condition of the human race was most happy and prosperous'

365. Le Marquis de Sade: Sex and Violence

September 03, 2023

Context:

Referenced when discussing Sade's theory that Christianity caused Rome's decline, noting Gibbon had also suggested Christianity was a cause of Rome's fall

361. The Lost Library of Alexandria

August 20, 2023

Context:

Referenced multiple times as the source of the myth that a Christian mob destroyed the Library of Alexandria in 391 AD. Gibbon is quoted directly about the library being 'pillaged or destroyed' and later quoted expressing gratitude for texts that survived rather than mourning losses.

260: Croatia: The Man Who Saved The Roman Empire

November 22, 2022

Context:

Referenced when discussing Diocletian's character - Gibbon is described as providing 'the great narrative account of this process' and is quoted as saying Diocles' 'abilities were useful rather than splendid.' Also referenced later when discussing the suspicious death of Numerian, with Gibbon 'ever skeptical' questioning why no aromatics could be found in the imperial household to mask the smell of the decomposing body.

240. Young Churchill: Soldier of Empire (Part 2)

October 06, 2022

Context:

Discussed as one of the major works Churchill read during his autodidactic period in Bangalore, India. Churchill wrote 'I devoured Gibbon. I rode triumphantly through it from end to end'

218. Theodora: Empress of Byzantium (Part 1)

August 08, 2022

Context:

Referenced when discussing how the image of Byzantium as a period of decline has dominated English-speaking perceptions since Gibbon's famous work. Mentioned twice in the transcript as shaping negative views of the Byzantine Empire.

217. Plague and the decline of the Roman Empire

August 04, 2022

Context:

Referenced multiple times in the discussion as the traditional model for understanding Rome's decline. Mentioned as 'the old kind of Edward Gibbon decline and fall sort of model' and later referenced when discussing Gibbon's view that the Antonine Age was 'the happiest in human history.'

166. Genghis Khan: Lord of the Mongols

March 22, 2022

Context:

Referenced as the source who described Subotai's military campaign as 'one of the most extraordinary bits of military achievement in history' - likely from The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire

157. Byzantium and the Ghosts of Rome

March 01, 2022

Context:

Referenced at the end of the episode when comparing their discussion to Gibbon's work: 'it took Edward Gibbon 20 years' to write about the fall of Rome.

156. When did the Roman Empire fall?

February 28, 2022

Context:

Explicitly mentioned at the start of the episode as 'his great book' that Gibbon completed on June 27, 1787, taking 20 years to write about the fall of Rome.

111. Golden Ages

October 25, 2021

Context:

Referenced when discussing the golden age of the Antonines, with a quote from Gibbon about the period from the death of Domitian to the accession of Commodus being when 'the condition of the human race was most happy and prosperous.'

86. The Enlightenment

August 16, 2021

Context:

A listener question references 'Listening to Gibbons, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire' on audiobook, discussing Gibbon's descriptions of peoples as 'savages'

41. Persia

April 08, 2021

Context:

Ali references Gibbon's notion about the Persians being 'over-civilized' and becoming decadent, discussing how Europeans categorized Persians as civilized rather than barbarians