Falk’s Reviews > Constantine the Great: The Man and His Times > Status Update
Falk
is on page 93 of 279
"It is a curious paradox that this emperor who so loudly claimed to have suppressed the ‘barbarians’ did more than anyone else to advance the already existing tendency to appoint German generals in the Roman army and to strengthen it by the addition of numerous German soldiers." pp. 68-9
— Jul 28, 2018 03:33PM
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Falk’s Previous Updates
Falk
is on page 211 of 279
Although Grant duly notes in the first chapter (titled ‘The Souces’) that Eusebius was a “depressingly unobjective historian” and also that he “falsified the emperor into a mere sanctimonious devotee, which he was not” - he still quotes Eusebius an awful lot – and relatively often uncritically. I’m not sure what to make of this book. Grant, oddly, seems somehow divided against himself.
— Jul 31, 2018 05:11PM



But quite apart from this particular difficulties, the position of the decurions were a miserable one. Indeed, the ruin which these enforced taxation duties brought upon them, largely as a result of the policies of Constantine, meant the virtual destruction of the entire middle class of which they were the backbone – the class to which the Roman world had owed so much." p. 91