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Europe: Ancient and Medieval discourse (p. 8) but regularly records oratio recta and oratio obliqua without commenting on why the usage matters (e.g., pp. 53, 65, 74, 76, 99, 103, 132). In general the book would benefit from scholarship since the “linguistic turn” of the mid 1980s, but Adler relies on earlier scholarly views. The final chapter contains a careful catalogue of conclusions, the most important of which may be that the original audiences must not have recoiled when their historians included speeches critical of Rome (pp. 168– 169). Generally speaking, Adler has brought forward provocative subject matter, but one could wish that he had expanded our thinking more. JANE D. CHAPLIN Middlebury College RAYMOND VAN DAM. Remembering Constantine at the Milvian Bridge. Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press. 2011. Pp. xiii, 296. $90.00. Constantine’s victory at the Battle of the Milvian Bridge in 312 C.E. is a famous episode in both the history of the Roman Empire and that of Christianity. In the usual overview, Constantine felt slighted when he was not made emperor by the other tetrarchs (or college of emperors) upon the death of his father Constantius in the summer of 306. His father’s army hailed him as Augustus, and later Constantine received official recognition as Caesar (in the tetrarchy the title of a junior emperor). Constantine ultimately invaded Italy to fight Maxentius (another Caesar who was the son of a tetrarch and Constantine’s brother-in-law). Their forces met at the Milvian Bridge outside Rome on October 28 of 312. According to the standard narrative, which follows the church historian Eusebius, Constantine had a vision of a cross in the sky and (in Greek) the message that translates into English as “conquer by this,” followed by a dream in which Christ appeared to him and commanded him to display the sign that Eusebius describes as the Greek letters Chi and Rho superimposed one on the other. Constantine had his troops put the sign on their shields, made a battle standard of it, and won the battle. A few months later in 313 Constantine and the Emperor Licinius issued a law, often called the “Edict of Milan,” that granted toleration for Christianity. Thus, the Battle of the Milvian Bridge stands as a “turning point” in the career of Constantine and in the history of Christianity (which would become the de facto official religion of the empire by the end of the fourth century). Because of the seeming importance of the battle, modern historians have explored motivations and explanations for this event (as well as the vision/dream) that accompanied it. For instance, the eighteenth-century Edward Gibbon saw Constantine’s faith going through a slow development, while in the mid-nineteenth century Jacob Burckhardt perceived Constantine as a Machiavellian politician who used Christianity to build his power base. In this stimulating new book, Raymond Van Dam, no stranger to scholars of late antiquity, closely re-examines the primary AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW 911 sources for the event and argues that many authors changed and “suborned” their texts and that Constantine manipulated his own narrative of these events in reaction to those changes. As the title suggests, this book is about the reception, descriptions, and memories of the Battle of the Milvian Bridge—which Van Dam argues do not always convey what actually occurred. The book starts with a timeline that is distinctively in reverse chronological order (foreshadowing Van Dam’s argument about the constructed memories of our sources). Chapter one suggests “the past did not generate fixed memories; instead, memories constructed a past” (p. 9). In chapter two, Van Dam surveys medieval and modern echoes of Constantine and the Milvian Bridge (ranging from Clovis, to the Donation of Constantine, to Benito Mussolini’s march on Rome). Chapter three treats pagan views of Constantine (such as those of Zosimus and Julian) and then introduces the major church historians who treat Constantine (Eusebius, Evagrius, Socrates, Sozomen, Theodoret, and Rufinus). In chapter four, Van Dam develops the relationship between Constantine and the memory of the vision and battle as described in Eusebius’s Life of Constantine (Vita Constantini ). He suggests that “The account of the emperor’s vision and dream in [Eusebius’] Life hence represented three distinct layers of particular circumstances: Eusebius’ remembrance of Constantine’s memories of events from long ago” (p. 57). The relationship between Constantine’s memory and Eusebius’s descriptions is developed further in chapter five, which stresses how Eusebius changed his story over the course of decades in the different editions of his Ecclesiastical History (Historia Ecclesiasticae). Chapter six argues that Constantine changed his memory over time and was influenced by Lactantius’s description in his Death of the Persecutors (De Mortibus Persecutorum), the arch of Constantine, and the Latin Panegyric of 313. In chapter seven, Van Dam develops evidence from the poet Poryfrius, Constantine’s interaction with the church over Donatism, the lost arch at Malborghetto, and the gigantic statue of Constantine in Rome, suggesting that “the emperor’s memories about his vision, his dream, and the military standard were not a source for Eusebius’ account but rather a consequence of hearing Eusebius’ account of his monuments at Rome” (pp. 200–201). Chapter eight marks an end to the critical analysis of the sources, but it challenges the construction of a new “master narrative” because all these sources “had their own agendas, which they could promote,” and “the lesson should be the realization that our modern narratives are likewise constructed” (p. 219). In chapter nine, Van Dam presents an examination of Maxentius as an emperor trying to follow the principate model of the early empire to curry favor with the elite of Rome, but whose reign was the last gasp of that model. Finally, in chapter ten, Van Dam recalls the ancient Roman legend, preserved by Livy, of Horatio Cocles defending a bridge against an Etruscan invasion and hypothesizes that Maxentius may have been trying JUNE 2012 912 Reviews of Books to emulate Horatius’s defense of Rome when he marched out against Constantine. This book is well researched and written in a dynamic fashion. Van Dam clearly knows the primary and secondary sources well. Although he cites the anonymous Origo Constantini Imperatoribus, he does not develop analysis of this unusual source from the late fourth or early fifth century, which describes the battle without religious implications. Van Dam could have wrestled more explicitly (p. 12, n. 18) with the argument of Peter Weiss that Constantine had only one vision (in 310) and that all the sources were describing that. Although clearly influenced by postmodernism, Van Dam writes so well that he can snare the reader. He is surely correct that Eusebius changed his description of the event in different editions of his works. The point that Constantine’s own memory was shaped by Eusebius, Lactantius, and other sources is provocative, and criticism of sources is always useful to historians. It is not impossible that Lactantius, who had survived Diocletian’s persecution and may have been at Constantine’s court at the time of the event as the tutor of Constantine’s eldest son, was reporting the official court line about the battle when he wrote two to three years later. Lactantius’s description of Constantine’s sign may have been an attempt to describe the Chi-Rho, but it is also similar to symbols of late Roman solar monotheism. The similarity may have been deliberate on Constantine’s part, as recently suggested by H. A. Drake. So, perhaps we should view the interaction between Constantine and the primary sources as more of an intellectual dialogue than Constantine borrowing from them. In conclusion, Van Dam’s book is a fascinating exercise that will provoke its own scholarly dialogue for years to come. ROBERT M. FRAKES Clarion University FLORIN CURTA. The Edinburgh History of the Greeks, c. 500 to 1050: The Early Middle Ages. (The Edinburgh History of the Greeks.) Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. 2011. Pp. vii, 365. $135.00. This very learned and detailed investigation represents an advance in the field. Florin Curta has undertaken an ambitious and urgently needed study of a very difficult and controversial subject and historical era: “the emergence of the economic and social structures in Greece between c. 500 and c. 1050” (p. 8), and his book reflects wide-ranging reading and reflection. Curta has written extensively about ethnicity and demographic change in late antique and medieval southeastern Europe, and he knows the larger historical, archaeological, and numismatic contexts. While the paucity of written (literary and epigraphic) sources is one challenge, Curta introduces much valuable numismatic and sigillographic evidence, and the chosen chronological span is a reasonable one. There are, however, some questions about other basics. The resulting synthesis of detailed information AMERICAN HISTORICAL REVIEW about Greeks in what is today’s mainland Greece and nearby islands gives little attention to Greeks in Anatolia. Who were Greeks, and what was Greece? Not all Greeks were located in mainland Greece or the Aegean islands. There is no entry in the large index for Armenians, even though they intermixed with Greeks in Anatolia and the Balkans. Among the book’s major conclusions are that an economic contraction began ca. 620 C.E. (p. 97); identities were much more fluid than previously imagined, as Curta discusses similarities and differences in archaeological evidence associated with a range of social and ethnic groups; ethnicity was a measure of the cultural distance between inhabitants of the Byzantine Empire and barbarians (p. 295); there is no evidence for continuity between sixth-century aristocrats in Greece and “military men of the late seventh century” (p. 231); militarization of aristocratic identity and values went hand in hand with competition for imperial titles (p. 231); and nevertheless ethnic boundaries were important (p. 290). Curta consciously investigates arguably the most contentious topic of Byzantine historiography in the past sixty-five years: aspects (in southeastern Europe) of the origins, nature, and chronology of the Byzantine “theme” system (military corps and their military corps districts). That entails risks. He also touches on another venerable and highly (almost equally) contentious issue: the continuity or non-continuity of the Greek people and the Greek language. Curta believes political and ethnic factors have been much exaggerated in the history of the Greeks for that period (p. 10). Although the answer may require a military explanation, Curta does not demonstrate mastery of the latest research and conclusions in this contested sphere. There is no historical consensus on military and social institutions in this poorly documented era. Military structures are not necessarily synonymous or identical with economic and social ones. Curta argues for a new interpretation that emphasizes the role of the army, especially for sixth and seventh-century evidence (p. 92). He believes coin hoards are related to military movements in the late sixth century, but he is not a military historian; there are difficulties here. He offers a hypothesis, not a conclusively proven fact. Byzantine military institutions are especially obscure. Curta needs to explain military dimensions of his broader hypothesis more explicitly. The presentation is too vague and does not fit the latest scholarly interpretations of the Byzantine theme system. The military institutional technical term thema/ themata or “theme” may not have appeared until the early ninth century. Curta, however, argues for the emergence of the “theme” of Hellas in the Byzantine Empire in the late seventh century (pp. 110, 125). The book contains many useful maps but, with the exception of the first two illustrations on fourth-, fifth-, and sixthcentury fortifications in Greece, there are no maps of putative military administration and related structures in the territories he chose to investigate (pp. 276–277). JUNE 2012