Through extensive analysis of primary sources, including legal codes (Codex Theodosianus and Corpus Iuris Civilis), contemporary histories (Ammianus Marcellinus, Procopius, and Zosimus), and epistolary records (Pliny the Younger, Sidonius Apollinaris, and Cassiodorus), this work reconstructs the administrative mechanisms that sustained imperial rule across diverse provinces. It explores the fate of provincial administration following the fragmentation of the Western Empire, assessing how successor states, including the Visigoths, Ostrogoths, and Franks, preserved or adapted Roman bureaucratic traditions. Additionally, it examines the Byzantine Empire's evolution of provincial governance, particularly the emergence of the theme system as a response to new geopolitical realities.
This book argues that while the fall of the Western Empire marked the end of centralized Roman rule in the West, the administrative foundations laid by Rome continued to influence medieval European and Byzantine governance for centuries. By examining the legacy of Roman provincial administration, the study sheds light on the enduring structures of imperial governance and their lasting impact on the political and legal traditions of the post-Roman world.
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