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Description
The Empire died on parchment before it fell to swords. Before the barbarians crossed the Rhine, before the last emperor fled, Rome had already ceased to function. This book argues that the Empire's decline was not primarily a military defeat but an administrative one-a slow disintegration of the systems that collected taxes, maintained roads, moved supplies, and kept provinces loyal. Drawing on epigraphic and archaeological evidence, it reconstructs the daily machinery of Roman governance and shows where cracks first appeared: in the gap between law and enforcement, between imperial decree and local compliance. The narrative follows the lives of mid-level officials, provincial governors, and legionary quartermasters whose decisions shaped the Empire more than any single emperor. It traces how corruption became structural, how information networks failed, and how the distance between Rome and its frontiers grew too vast for command to mean anything. The book also examines how the Diocletianic reforms, designed to save the Empire, instead hardened its arteries and made collapse inevitable. A sobering study of how great powers fail not when they are conquered, but when they can no longer govern themselves. Known for narrative histories about trade empires, shipping routes, and financial systems.



