Warehouse Stock Clearance Sale

Grab a bargain today!


The Avars
By

Rating

Product Description
Product Details

Table of Contents

List of Maps
Timeline
Preface
1. Approaching the Avars
1.1. Marginal Europeans?
1.2. Sources and Prejudices
1.3. Steppe Research and Its Methodological Problems
2. The Avar Migration
2.1. Constantinople 558
2.2. The Empire and the Steppe Peoples
2.3. Fugitives from the East
2.4. Avars or Pseudo-Avars?
2.5. The Advance of the Avars
2.6. Byzantium and the Turks
2.7. The Discovery of Europe
2.8. Decisive Years
2.9. 568: A Turning Point
3. The New Power, 567–90
3.1. The First Attack on Sirmium
3.2. Between Peace and War
3.3. Baian's Alliance with Byzantium
3.4. The Conquest of Sirmium
3.5. 583/84: Avar Raids and Symbolic Politics
3.6. 585/86: Slavic Raids and the Bookolabras Affair
3.7. 587: The War in Thrace
3.8. The Carpathian Basin in the Later Sixth Century: The Archaeological Evidence
3.9. Cultures around Keszthely
4. Avars and Slavs
4.1. Slavs before the Avars: Perceptions and Origins
4.2. The Saint and the Barbarians
4.3. Slavic Campaigns and Memories of Avars on the Greek Peninsula
4.4. The Obor and His Slavs
4.5. Avar Rule and Slavic Expansion
4.6. Becoming Slavs
5. The Balkan Wars of Maurice, 591–602
5.1. Maurice's Campaign and the Date of the Wars
5.2. The Avars on the Offensive
5.3. 593: Attacks on the Slavs North of the Danube
5.4. 594: The Limits of the Slavic War
5.5. 595: The Illyrian War
5.6. The Avars' Western Policy and the Slavs
5.7. 598: Only the Plague Can Stop the Avars
5.8. 599: The Khagan under Pressure
5.9. 600–602: The End of Imperial Politics on the Danube
6. Life and Organization in the Avar Empire
6.1. Nomads, Warriors, Steppe Peoples
6.2. "Their Life Is War"
6.3. The Early Avar Khaganate
6.4. The Avars and Byzantium
6.5. Avar Gold: Prestige, Gifts, Representation
6.6. Logades and Warriors
6.7. Forms of Production and Distribution
6.8. Exchanges and Their Limits
6.9. Religion and Ritual
6.10. The Development of Identities in the Avar Empire
7. The Seventh Century
7.1. Consolidation and New Offensives
7.2. The Surprise Attack on the Emperor
7.3. 626: The Siege of Constantinople
7.4. Samo
7.5. Croat Migrations?
7.6. Alciocus and Kuvrat
7.7. Kuver and Asparukh
7.8. Continuity and Cultural Change
8. The Century of the Griffin
8.1. Ways of Life in Archaeological Evidence
8.2. The Hierarchy of the Late Avar State
8.3. Limes Certus: The Avars and the West
8.4. The Collapse of Avar Power
8.5. Why Did the Avars Disappear?
8.6. Conclusion
Appendix: Amount of Subsidies Paid by Byzantiumto the Avars
Abbreviations
Notes
Sources
Bibliography
Index

About the Author

Walter Pohl is Professor Emeritus of Medieval History at the University of Vienna, Fellow of the Medieval Academy of America, and was Director of the Institute of Medieval Research at the Austrian Academy of Sciences. He is the editor of Medieval Worlds, coeditor of Emerging Powers in Eurasian Comparison, and author of numerous books in German.

Reviews

Walter Pohl has succeeded in stripping much of this veil of mystery from the Avars.... a heterogeneous group from central Asia who dominated the Byzantine Danube frontier in a complicated relationship that saw raids, wars, trade, and the payment of large annual sums of tribute. In tracing the history of the Avars and the peoples they dominated or fought and traded with, this is an illuminating history of southeast Europe in the early Middle Ages. (Speculum) This volume contains a wealth of information and informed discussion; it will repay careful study by anyone involved in the late Roman and early medieval period, and will remain the standard guide into the foreseeable future. (English Historical Review) Walter Pohl picks his way judiciously though the minefield of primary sources—fragmentary and contradictory—and secondary interpretations of varied value. His solid medievalist training coupled with common sense often balk at the most fanciful interpretations. The documentation assembled by Pohl is impressive; the use he made of it commands respect. Future research on all questions concerning the Avars, henceforth cannot bypass this very important book. (Journal of Asian History) Though the book was first published in German in 1988, this English version includes many revisions and updates and will be the definitive English-language study of the Avar empire for years to come. It will be invaluable for those interested in medieval history or in the impact of nomadic steppe empires on sedentary civilizations. (Choice) The book clearly stands as a monumental starting point of any future research on the Avars. Pohl and Cornell University Press deserve praise for publishing this important work of scholarship in English. (Studies in Late Antiquity) One wonders how it could have taken thirty years for the appearance of this, the first English edition of Walter Pohl's seminal work. But now that it is finally accessible to a much wider readership, it must be made clear that The Avars is more than just a translation. (Journal of the Australian Early Medieval Association)

Ask a Question About this Product More...
 
Look for similar items by category
Item ships from and is sold by Fishpond World Ltd.

Back to top
We use essential and some optional cookies to provide you the best shopping experience. Visit our cookies policy page for more information.