cover image The End of Empire: Attila the Hun and the Fall of Rome

The End of Empire: Attila the Hun and the Fall of Rome

Christopher Kelly, . . Norton, $26.95 (350pp) ISBN 978-0-393-06196-3

The decline and fall of ancient Rome is a subject of perpetual fascination—here are three new takes.

The End of Empire: Attila the Hun and the Fall of Rome Christopher Kelly . Norton , $26.95 (320p) ISBN 978-0-393-06196-3

Drawing on the Roman historian Priscus of Panium's History of Attila the Hun , Cambridge University historian Kelly (Ruling the Later Roman Empire ) restores the image of Attila as a politically ingenious leader bent more on making strategic alliances to benefit his people than conquering neighboring tribes by savage attacks. With the grace of a good storyteller, Kelly narrates the Huns' origins as nomadic peoples who eventually settled in the Great Hungarian Plain. As they began to consolidate their control over new territories, says Kelly, the Huns recognized the need for a more stable form of government, a greater concentration of military effort focused on a single objective, and the closer coordination of all clans under one leader. In A.D. 434, they found their leader in Attila, and the Huns steadily conquered—by force and by strategic political agreements—various regions of the Roman Empire. They were never able to take Rome, but battling the Huns so weakened Rome's resources that Vandals sacked the city in A.D. 455, effectively ending the Western Roman Empire. Kelly's first-rate history provides a singularly fresh look at a fractious period in the life of ancient Rome. Maps. (June)