Conversations with Tyler - Tom Holland on History, Christianity, and the Value of the Countryside
Episode Date: March 22, 2023Historian Tom Holland joined Tyler to discuss in what ways his Christianity is influenced by Lord Byron, how the Book of Revelation precipitated a revolutionary tradition, which book of the Bible is m...ost foundational for Western liberalism, the political differences between Paul and Jesus, why America is more pro-technology than Europe, why Herodotus is his favorite writer, why the Greeks and Persians didn't industrialize despite having advanced technology, how he feels about devolution in the United Kingdom and the potential of Irish unification, what existential problem the Church of England faces, how the music of Ennio Morricone helps him write for a popular audience, why Jurassic Park is his favorite movie, and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded February 1st, 2023 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Tom on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Learn more about Conversations with Tyler and other Mercatus Center podcasts here. Photo credit: Sadie Holland
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Hello, everyone, and welcome back to Conversations with Tyler.
Today I'm honored to be chatting with Tom Holland.
I'm a huge fan of Tom.
He is a historian, a public intellectual, and author.
He has numerous books, including Millennium, Persian Fire, Dynasty, Books on Islam.
His latest is Dominion, How the Christian Revolution Remade the World, which I am a big fan of.
He does with Dominic Sandbrook, one of the best-known, perhaps the best-known history podcast called The Rest is History.
He is frequently on radio and television, has performed what is the greatest translation of Herodotus ever.
He is a huge cricket fan, and he is fighting.
to save the hedgehog in England. Tom, welcome.
Thank you very much, and I'm sure the mention of cricket will induce furrowed brows across America.
In what way is your interpretive Christianity still influenced by Lord Byron,
a writer you've started your career working on?
That's a very, very good question, because I'd never thought of the conjunction,
although now you mention it.
So I was raised by my mother in the Church of England.
She is a regular churchgoer, and so I went to church with her.
And so that was very much part of my upbringing.
But at the same time, my mother's elder brother, my uncle David, he was an extraordinary man
who had, during the Second World War, he'd been posted as a very young man out to India.
He'd fallen in love with India.
Throughout the 50s, he worked as a publisher in Pakistan.
And then while he was out there, he decided that actually he wanted to be an actor.
So he came back to England.
He got roles, he got a role in Doctor Who as a homicidal Tibetan monk.
He was not a churchgoer.
would be fair to say. And he took me to Newsted Abbey as a very impressionable boy. And Newstead Abbey is the
home of Lord Byron. And it was an abbey that had been closed down in the Reformation, bought by the
Byron's. The Byrons had fought on the side of the king in the civil war, had been kind of admirals and
Neer-do-wells. And Byron inherited this title. And I went to this abbey and was told stories about how
Byron and his friends would dress up as monks. Byron had a drinking cup made out of a skull. And he and all the
would, you know, do very ungodly things. And this seemed to me the height of glamour and sophistication.
And to my innocent churchgoing self, Byron became a kind of model of swagger and glamour, as he was
for people throughout the 19th century and for many people still is. And so I became fascinated by
Byron. I initially wanted to do a doctorate on him. But then I gave that up because I decided that
he was just too fascinating, too charismatic, and basically too hostile to the academic, I think,
that he didn't deserve an academic treatment.
And so instead, I wrote a novel in which he was a vampire.
And so that set me on the course of writing.
So I wrote three novels in various periods of history
in which famous people from history were vampires.
And I began to realize I wasn't really interested in writing novels.
I wasn't ultimately interested in writing vampire stories.
I wanted to write about history.
But the link, I think, with Christianity is that what interested me in writing about the vampire novels
and what has interested me in writing all the various volumes of history in various periods of time that I've done since
is a fascination with how people in different ages understood things that to us today might seem far-fetched, implausible, impossible.
So essentially how they relate to the dimension of the supernatural.
And I think it's a real problem for anyone in the 21st century trying to understand the past
is that perhaps too academic approach to the study of what, say, people in Rome or early medieval
Europe or whatever thought about the divine is that it's a bit like studying a butterfly by sticking
a pin through it. And too objective, too academic, too rationalist an approach can risk
alienating you from the very perspectives that you're trying to understand. And I think that
that was something I realized now from the distance of time from when I was writing the vampire
books. That's what I was kind of exploring in those books and have continued to explore, I think.
And do you feel the power and influence of Catholicism more strongly because you're still
a Byronite, still thinking about vampires? No, I don't think so. I found when I came to writing
about Christianity and Dominion is a study of the entire sweep of Christianity. I mean, it's kind of
insanely ambitious book, that it was a kind of privilege for me to immerse myself in all these
different periods and read the great Christian writers and thinkers and polemicists of different
periods. And I found that I was fascinated in almost all of them. And there was very rarely a chapter
that I wrote where I didn't think, I wish I could stay here and continue to read about it.
And absolutely, writing about the medieval church, I found I did find it very, very powerful.
but equally getting to the Reformation, I felt the power of the Protestant reformers as well.
And actually, we're recording this in London is the afternoon.
This morning I spent recording three episodes of The Restless History on what's erroneously called the Cathars
were the objects of perhaps the most brutal and bloody of all the Crusades waged not against Muslim enemies,
but against Christians themselves in the 13th century.
And I think it's difficult in that context to look at the Catholic Church of the Middle Ages.
is as wholly a benign institution.
If the book of Revelation were more important in Christian thought, would we as a society
all be less liberal?
It doesn't read like a liberal book, right?
No, it isn't.
If you look at Jehovah's Witnesses who put a lot of stress on Revelation, they seem less
classically liberal.
The thing about the book of Revelation is that it was recognized by Christians themselves
in antiquity as a highly dangerous book.
So it wasn't included in the canon of the New Testament in the Orthodox Church.
Church, so in the realms of the Byzantine Empire, until the 10th century, they were nervous of it.
And although it was included in the canon of the New Testament in the Latin Church much earlier,
again, you look at the Church fathers in the Latin Church, and again, they're very, very nervous
of it.
And the archetype of the greatest of the Latin Church Father St. Augustine, writing in the late 4th
and early 5th century, he is very, very anxious that Christians might read the book of Revelation
and interpret it too literally.
And so there's talk about, you know,
a thousand years in the book of Revelation
as a key span of time.
And Augustine is absolutely definite
that this is to be seen as a kind of abstraction.
And so when the first millennium arrives,
a year 1,000,
the church is not encouraging people
to feel kind of apocalyptic anxieties.
But I think they indisputably do.
And I think actually, ironically,
the fact that the church emerges
from this millennial period and that Christ hasn't come,
the reign of Antichrist hasn't come.
The horrors and the extraordinary wars and plagues and terrors
that were seen by John in the book of Revelation
have not been manifested.
It opens up for reformers in the 11th century
to an idea that the Christian people can be cleansed,
can be reformed, can be brought closer to God.
And that precipitates what I think is the first great revelations.
movement in European and therefore Western history, what's called the papal revolution.
And it's that revolution, I think, that stands at the fountainhead of the entire revolutionary
tradition of which we in the 21st century are still heirs. And I think that, you know,
liberalism, all kinds of things, would not have been possible without that revolutionary moment.
And so perhaps to that extent, without the book of revelation, maybe the papal revolution
wouldn't have been launched and maybe we wouldn't be where we are today.
Which gospel do you view is most foundational for Western liberalism and why?
I think that that is a treacherous question to ask because it implies that there would be
a coherent line of dissent from any one text that can be traced like that.
I think that the line of dissent that leads from the Gospels and from the New Testament and
from the Bible and indeed from the entire corpus of early Christian texts to modern liberalism
is too confused, too much of a swirl of influences for us to trace it back to a particular text.
If I had to choose any one book from the Bible, it wouldn't be a gospel. It would probably be
Paul's letter to the Galatians because Paul's letter to the Galatians contains the famous verse
that there is no Jew or Greek, there is no slave or free, there is no man or woman in Christ.
And in a way, that text, even if you kind of bracket out and remove the in Christ from it,
that idea that properly there should be no discrimination between people of different
cultural and ethnic backgrounds based on gender, based on class, remains pretty foundational
for liberalism to this day. And I think that liberalism in so many ways is a kind of
secularized rendering of that extraordinary verse. I mean, I think it's almost impossible to avoid
metaphor when thinking about what the relationship is to these biblical texts, these biblical verses,
to the present day. And I variously compared Paul in particular in his letters and his writings
to rather unoriginally to an acorn from which a mighty oak grows. But I think actually more
appropriately to a depth charge released beneath the vast fabric of classical civilization and the
ripples, the reverberations of it are faint to begin with, and then they become louder and
louder and more and more disruptive. And those echoes from that depth charge continue to reverberate
to this day. As you know, there's the Jacob Taubis view, that Paul is more anti-Roman and in some
ways more anti-Statist than Jesus, revising Jesus politically. What is your take on that debate?
How is Paul revising Jesus politically? I think that Jesus is very radically anti-state, and by
state, I mean specifically the notion that both in Jerusalem and in Rome, power is interfused
with those who claim a mandate to interpret the divine. This is clearly the case in the Jerusalem
temple. The gospel writers, and we don't know the sayings of Jesus are mediated through the
gospel writers and the degree to which they correspond to what a historical Jesus might have said is
obviously hugely contested. But insofar as we have a record of what the historical Jesus might have said,
in the Gospels. He seems hostile to the Jerusalem temple authorities. And I think that what he is hostile
to is summed up in that the attack on the money changes and the idea that in some way, what is
gods can be implicated in the churn of the earthly. And I think he also feels that about Rome,
that the Romans also, it's often cast today that the Jews are religious and by Jesus going before
Pilate is somehow being handed over to the secular authorities, but the Romans are no less secular
than the Judean authorities. The Romans too are absolutely implicated in a sense that their power is
interfused with an understanding of the divine. Pontius Pilate's main base is in the city of
Caesaria, which is named after Caesar Augustus, and Augustus is a god. And the Romans also,
like the Jews, have a great temple in their city, the capitaline temple, the temple of
capitaline Jupiter, which ironically will be incinerated a few months before the Jerusalem
temple is incinerated by the Romans in AD 70. And I think that Jesus, in that kind of incredibly
potent episode where people come up to him and they say, should we be paying taxes to the Romans?
And Jesus asks for a coin. And he is given a coin and he says, whose head is on this? And the people
who are talking to him say, the head of Caesar. And Jesus famously says, will render under Caesar
what is and render unto God, what is good.
gods. That is, again, another of these depth charges, another of these acorns from which mighty
oaks will grow, because it's there that you get the idea, actually, in the long run, of
there being kind of something that is secular. Jesus, I think, is all about separating the divine
from the earthly, and that is an incredibly potent insight. And it's one that is as hostile to the
claims of Caesar, as to the claims of the temple authorities. And I think Paul is completely the
air of that. And I think Paul understands that.
and there's a huge sense in which his letters, his understanding of Jesus, the way that he portrays that, serves as a kind of parody of the cult of Augustus.
So I mentioned the letter to the Galatians. Galatia is one of the great centres of the cult of Augustus.
And so I think that when Paul is writing to the Galatians, he is very, very conscious that the God that he is talking about exists in the context of a world in which the fast
growing cult is the cult of Caesar.
How do you view the Christian foundations of African-American liberalism as being different?
Well, I hesitate as an Englishman to kind of in any way pontificate about American history,
but with that caveat I will rush in where angels fear to dread.
But you pontificate about Roman history, about Islamic history, right?
America is a pretty close cousin.
So my feeling about this is that the civil rights movement is one of a succession of great
awakenings in American Protestantism and indeed in Anglo-American Protestantism. So let that be
my sanction for talking about this. This idea that reverberates throughout Anglo-American history,
that people need to be awakened to a sense of their sin and therefore to a sense of the potential
for salvation. African-Americans are the heirs of that as well. They inherit the Protestantism
and often the evangelical Protestantism of the white Americans. And the figure of Martin Luther King
is emblematic of that. He is the reverend Martin Luther King. He is absolutely situated in the tradition
of radical Protestantism, which the Baptists are kind of, you know, he's a Baptist minister. He is
heir to these traditions that go back to the 17th century and the 16th century and perspectives that
are often incredibly radical. And the more radical fringe of Protestants, and these are Protestants
who often emigrate from England to the new world because their understanding of what the
Bible teaches is seen as being too radical, too hot to handle back in England. And they bring with them
this notion that the Bible can only be understood if mediated by the spirit. So it's not what the Bible
says in black and white. It's what the spirit makes you understand. And it's this in due course
that enables Quakers and evangelicals, for instance, to argue that slavery as an institution is evil,
even though notoriously, nowhere in the Bible is that ever said. For evangelicals, for Quakers,
for radical Protestants, that's an irrelevance.
The spirit has descended on them and it has enabled them to understand that.
That sense combines with the incredible power of the Exodus story.
The idea that people who've been in bondage can be brought out of slavery
and can be brought to a new world, a new land.
That is what kind of powers the pilgrim fathers and other emigrants from England.
And in due course, it's what powers people as they move from the East Coast across America.
and of course it has an incredibly potent influence on African Americans
during the period of their servitude and in the wake after it.
And the failure of reconstruction, the fact that particularly in the South,
there remains so much institutional oppression,
so much institutional racism,
means that in the 50s and the 60s,
when there are campaigns starting to develop,
calling for civil rights,
calling for the rejection of repressive laws in the South, this inheritance is an obvious one to draw on.
And that's why Martin Luther King is such a potent spokesman for it.
Because when he tells white American Christians that black American Christians are their brothers and sisters,
he is going with the grain of everything that American Protestantism, radical Protestantism,
has been about since the very beginning.
And he can articulate the power of the Exodus,
story and the power of scripture as mediated by people upon whom the spirit has descended.
And he can do so in a way that reverberates beyond the black churches into the white churches.
And secularized throughout the 60s, it's this great movement, I think, that like the spirit,
blowing in the wind, as it were, animates not just the civil rights movement, but all kinds of
other movements as well.
So in due course, movements that may seem very opposed to doctrinal
Christianity, feminism, gay rights, and so on. So I think that the civil rights movement is
incomprehensible without that heritage. It's absolutely animated by it.
In Genesis and Exodus, why does the older son so frequently catch it hard?
Well, I'm an elder son. I know. Your brother's younger, and he's a historian.
My brother is younger, and it's a question on which I've often pondered.
And what do you expect from your brother?
And the truth is, I have no idea. I don't know. I've often kind of worried about it. You mentioned Byron at the beginning of the show, and Byron wrote a play called Kane. And Kane, of course, is the first eldest son. And he kills his younger brother. And the mark of Kane is laid upon him and he becomes a great wanderer. And in Byron's play, Kane becomes the representative of a freethinker, someone who dares to defy the tyrannical almighty. And Satan, who appears to him is, you know, very much in the tradition of Milton Satan, as understood by the
romantic poets, Satan is someone who is saying that actually knowledge is found by defying God.
And I think because I was the eldest son, that's another reason why I found Byron's poetry
when I was, you know, in my teens, so powerful and so effective. And it's part of what led me
away from kind of Christian belief, really, a kind of feeling that all the cool kids were
hanging out with Kane and especially all the cool elder sons.
In the book of Exodus, why did there seem to be two versions of the Ten Commandments?
at 20 and then at 34.
The first being more legalistic, the second being more ritualistic.
Why are there two?
How do they fit together?
Well, I think this reflects the way in which what we call today the Bible.
It's an accretion of texts.
There often seem to be two versions of stories stitched together.
There are two versions of the creation of mankind, for instance.
Very obviously, you know, you have the Book of Kings and you have the Book of Chronicles.
They're essentially telling the same stories and kind of duplicating each other.
And I think that the construction of what comes to be called the Pentatube
the Torah, the first five books of the Bible. Because they're so foundational, because they're so
kind of important doctrinely to a sense of Jews and Christian sense of themselves, they were the
most rewritten and the most contested. And the idea that you get in the Quran very obviously that this
is literally the word of God. It's not being mediated by humans. With the Ten Commandments, you get that
as well. You know, this isn't being mediated by Isaiah or St. Matthew.
But by Moses, right? The Israelites don't get to look on the face of God.
But Moses is bringing the tablets down and those have been written by God.
Well, Moses claims.
Sure.
Sure. I mean, if you want to go that reductive, then Moses clearly almost certainly didn't exist.
I mean, he seems the most a historical figure.
But the claim is, and it's clearly believed by the people who are writing these texts or constructing
them or stitching them together to form what today we think of as those books.
For them, this is something awesome and holy, as the Quran is for Muslims.
It's something that you approach with extreme care, extreme and nervousness.
To tamper with the Word of God is to tamper with God.
And you don't want to do that because the Bible is full of examples of what happens to people who do that.
In a way, it's the kind of, it's the molten heart of what Christians call the Old Testament.
It's literally the word of God.
Are there religious reasons why America is more pro-technology than Europe?
That's a very good question. I think there are generally religious reasons for almost everything in America. But I suspect that it's more to do with the fact that it is easy to bring home improvements into a house that's just been built than it is to do home improvements in a house that's 500 years old. European states, you know, if you imagine them as kind of houses, they're very old. They have all kinds of dodgy wiring, bodge jobs. And everyone knows that the worst kind of DIY is when you, you know, you know,
yourself have bodged it over many, many years. It makes it much harder to do. It's much easier just to
kind of rip everything out and put it back in again. And I think that that is the kind of attitude that
people in America tend to have. I mean, I don't know. I have no stats on this, but I would guess
that it would be easier to import wholesale technology into a house on the outskirts of Houston than it
would be in downtown Manhattan. Or an English country home. Absolutely. But one of the things
it always strikes me when I go to New York is actually it's an old city. In Europe, we're accustomed
to thinking of America as, you know, modern and new. But New York is not a modern city. Boston,
not modern cities. I remember going to Boston. You know, I'd go for maybe over 10 years. And every time
I'd go, there'd be this massive great hole in the middle of Boston. And they were kind of trying,
I think, trying to develop a subway system. And every time I go, it got bigger.
They call it the big dig. They seem to be doing the big dig. And a big dig, I would guess,
it's much easier to do in a kind of, you know, I don't know, Vegas or Houston than in Boston,
because Boston is just a very old city in exactly the way that Manchester is in Britain or Lyon or somewhere.
I mean, they're not quite as old as Lyon, but it is always easier to develop technology, I think,
in areas where you don't have stuff already there.
And that's one of the reasons why over the course of the 19th century, you know,
the industrial lead moves from Britain to America and to Germany, doubtless, all kinds of
sociological reasons that I'm not qualified to opine.
about, but one of the reasons must be that Britain enters the Industrial Revolution first.
And so, you know, its industrial infrastructure, by definition, is older than that that comes
to be developed by the Americans or, say, the Germans.
Are you yourself ultimately a Gnostic?
I'm not a Gnostic in any way.
In any way, at all.
No, I'm not a Gnostic in any way.
What is your implicit theology?
So I remember going to San Francisco.
She wasn't my wife then.
she became my wife. She got a one-year place at Stanford, and I was very, very upset about this,
that she'd gone. And so I went out, and it was my first time to America, I went to San Francisco.
I was so excited to go to San Francisco, because for me, it was kind of the city of flower power,
and hippies and everything. And so I went to Hate Ashbury and just kind of went toward all the,
all the hippie bookshops, and got a whole load of books on the Gnostics there and kind of read them up.
And I was very into all that kind of stuff. But I now absolutely really really,
repudiate that. I don't think that the Gnostics were somehow, were hippies, were in any way
progressive. I think that they were kind of deep, dark, pessimists. And what I like in Christianity
actually is the message of hope that it offers, the message of salvation and the message
that matter is not evil, that our human bodies and the world around us are not creations of some
malign demiurge, but are created by God and therefore are good. I find that a much more positive
message than the kind of nosticism that I found so appealing when I was 21 and much in the
throes of love, which may have confused and blurred my thought patterns.
What did you learn about modernity by translating Herodotus, which I believe was one page
a day?
No, it wasn't one page a day.
So the books of Herodotus, there are nine books, and each book is divided up into chapters,
and this happened in antiquity.
And so I would set myself the challenge of translating one of those kind of terms.
chunks every day because otherwise I didn't think I would ever have finished it. What I learned about
modernity from Herodotus is that I think the quality about Herodotus that I have always loved,
he's always been my favorite writer, not just my favorite ancient writer, but my favorite
writer. It was the first classic writer I read. I've reread him. I've kind of reinterpreted him. I've
translated him. And I realize, as I was writing, what I loved was the infinite curiosity
that he has about everything. His writings are called Historia, which in Greek basically means
researches, inquiries. It doesn't mean history in the sense that we have. And he's not just
right, you know, he is writing about the past. He says that this is his aim, but he's not exclusively
writing about the past. He's writing about wild animals. He's writing about rivers. He's writing
about wonders in different lands. He's writing about how Egyptian men squat
to go to the toilet and Egyptian women stand up and how Skidians get stoned on bongs and all kinds of
extraordinary, mad, weird, fascinating stuff. And he was called in antiquity the father of lies
because there were lots of people who felt that, you know, he was just making it all up. I think
that's incredibly harsh. Often, many of the things that he was doubted for, he's been vindicated. And I think
what I found, I was translating Herodotus and I was able to use the internet as I was doing it,
if there was kind of subjects, you know, a name or something, I wouldn't have to go to a book
to look it up. I could look it up online. And I realized it brought home to me how arrogant it is
for us to sit in judgment on him when he was the first person to be doing this. He was the first
person to be pursuing the infinite curiosity he felt about the vast expanse of everything to its
absolute limits. And so of course he got things wrong. You know, we would. He didn't have the
internet. He didn't have an example of Herodotus.
Herodotus didn't exist. There was no horotist before Herodotus. He's doing it for the first time.
But I think that the sense of curiosity that the modern world is all about, we have access to more knowledge than is beyond the wildest dreams of previous generations.
And we can follow it wherever we want. And Herodotus, for me, stands at the head of that tradition, the head of that fascination with the fastness, the infinitude of the world.
and the universe that we inhabit.
And I look at modernity, and Herodotus sharpens for me a sense of how extraordinary
and wonderful it is that we can know everything that we do and that we have access to all
the sources of information that we have.
And it's a wonderful, wonderful thing, an incredible privilege of being alive in 2023.
Are we likely to learn much more about the Persian Empire?
And if so, how will that happen?
Would it be archaeology, some other technique, for?
recovering lost scrolls.
So we know a lot about Greece because Herodotus was Greek, and he writes about the Persian
wars, and so inevitably we see the world through Greek eyes because Herodotus was Greek.
However, one of the wonderful things about Herodotus, one of the many wonderful things,
is that he does try to see the world through Persian eyes.
And so he tells a remarkable story that I just think is astonishing.
So he imagines Darius the Great, who's the Persian king, who sends the expedition to Marathon,
that gets defeated at Marathon.
It's a great enemy of the Athenians.
And Herodotus imagines himself in Darius's high-heeled shoes, the high-heeled boots that the Persian kings are said to have worn.
And Darius summons Greeks and Indian tribe.
And these are the two people who exist on the western and eastern margins of his empire respectively.
And he says to the Greeks, what would it take me to do?
You know, what would I have to pay you to persuade you to eat your parents once they've died?
and the Greeks who burn their parents when they've died
throw their hands up in horror and say,
nothing, we would never do that.
And then Darias turns to the Indian tribe,
and these are a people who eat their parents when they've died
as a mark of their utmost respect.
And Dariah says to them,
what would I have to do to persuade you to burn your parents when they're dead?
And likewise, the Indian tribesmen throw their hands up in horror.
And Herodgister says,
this shows to me that custom is king,
you know, that everybody believes that their own customs are best.
And he understands that.
He understands that. He gets that. And so when he's writing about the Persians, he is trying to do his best to kind of portray them as they see themselves and not just to kind of do them down. Now, of course, it doesn't work. And the problem with the Persians is that we don't have a Persian Herodotus, nor do we have indeed a Persian Isaiah. The Jews also write about the Persians. And so our sense of the Persians has been mediated through the Bible and through the Greek historians hugely. What's happened over the past few decades, however, is that,
scholars have basically teamed up to try and go beyond that, to try and go beyond the kind of
the fact that we lack Persian accounts to try and see beyond what the Greeks and the Jews wrote.
And this has required basically pulling every conceivable source of information that we have.
So such Persian inscriptions as we do have, archaeology, the insights of areas of the Persian Empire
that perhaps hadn't previously been tapped, be that Egypt or Babylonia or whatever,
whether, again, there are sources, trying to put the Persian Empire as it functioned in the
the 6th, the 5th, the 4th centuries BC into some kind of understanding that is true to the
functioning of the empire in that period, rather than say, you know, sources that were written much later.
And this is a really, really difficult, challenging, complicated process.
And it's been one of the great feats of the field of ancient history that all these scholars have,
I think, achieved that.
They have, kind of, to a degree, performed an act of resurrection.
They have brought us to an understanding of the Persian Empire that is better than anyone's had since the collapse of the empire itself.
Is it possible the Persians might have had a philosophical tradition that was advanced in the manner that the Greeks were?
Maybe not quite as splendid.
But if we ruled that out or it might simply be lost?
They completely did.
And it was one of the most influential, intellectual, spiritual traditions that's ever existed.
Because I'm reluctant to call it Zoroastrianism.
It comes to be institutionalized as what today we might call Zoroastrianism in the third, the fourth, the fifth centuries AD, under a new Persian Empire, the empire that's governed by a family called the Sassanians.
But the Sassanian kings who are institutionalizing Zoroastrianism rather in the way that Constantine institutionalizes Christianity in the Roman Empire, they are clearly drawing on traditions that were very, very current in the earliest Persian Empire, the Khymenid Empire.
And these traditions are essentially dualist.
It's the idea that the world can be moralised, that it can be understood as being divided between rival spheres of good and evil, of light and dark, of truth and the lie.
And this is what's so influential about the Persian's empire is that they moralize their own imperialism.
And this is hugely influential because when the Persian king, so Darius would be the person who most potently express,
this. He says that he is the chosen one of Ahura Masta, the great god, the good lord, and that
truth and order are embodied in Ahura Mastra and that Darius as his deputy, therefore the realm that
he rules also is the dimension of truth and order. And the corollary of that is that those who
oppose Darius are agents of the lie and of anarchy. And therefore they must be crushed not just as
enemies of the Persian king, but as enemies of what is good. And when Xerxes leads his campaign
against the rebellious cities of Athens and Sparta, he is doing this not just to expand his
empire, but because he sees it, Athens and Sparta are terrorist states. They are states in which
demons have laid siege to the Acropolis and to the temples of Sparta and taken possession of it. And so
therefore they must be smoked out. I wrote about this in Persian fire, my book about the Persian
wars. And I was writing against the backdrop of the NATO attempt to stabilize Afghanistan,
which, you know, from the view of the West was a remote and mountainous backwater occupied by
terrorists. And I realized that basically, you know, that's how the Persian saw the Greeks. And we in
the West have the conceit that we are the heirs of Athens. But we are at least as much the
airs of the Persian kings, as we are of the Athenians. And that idea that the power can be moralized,
you know, it passes into the bloodstream, not just of Zoroastrianism, the Zoroastrianism of the
Sasanian Empire, but the Christian Empire of Constantine, the Muslim Caliphate, and has absolutely
passed into the present. We are, in that sense, completely the heirs of the Ichaemenid Empire.
The ancient Greeks and Persians, how technologically advanced do you think they were and how much
do we know about that? So I'm sure you're familiar with finding astronomical computing devices
from the ancient Greeks. We don't quite understand what all these things did. Is it possible
they were much more advanced than we realize? I would in no way claim to be a specialist in the
history of ancient technology. I think the hugely interesting question is basically not how advanced
were, say, the Greeks or the Romans, but why did they not industrialize? So moving on from the Greeks
of the Persians in looking at the Roman Empire in the second century AD.
This was an incredibly economically advanced society.
It had a vast internal market.
It was starting to record that the scale of the market
enable people to become richer and richer,
that more and more resources could be brought together.
It's been estimated that people in the Roman Empire
in the second century AD probably no society was as rich
until, say, the Netherlands, the Dutch Republic,
in the late 16th, early 17th century. So it's a very, very successful, economically successful,
prosperous society. And, you know, there are brilliant people who are developing all kinds of things.
But there does also seem to be on the part of the Roman elites, and this is true of the Greeks as well,
before that, a nervousness about allowing technology to go too far. So in Alexandria,
Hellenistic Alexandria, famously the steam engine is invented. What do the Alexandrians use it for?
they don't use it to develop steam engines.
So Arnold Toynbee, in his kind of panoramic history of the world,
envisages this counterfactual in which Macedonian soldiers are on steam trains,
kind of chugging across Mesopotamia, taking out Parthian rebels and so on.
That doesn't happen.
Instead, they use it to power temple kind of gimmicks so that people will go in and, you know,
they'll use steam and the statue of a god will move or something like that.
There's a story told of the emperor Tiberius that somebody approaches him and says, look, I've made unbreakable glass.
And Tiberius is very interested, but asks for it to be tested.
It's shown that this glass is indeed unbreakable.
And the inventor is delighted and thinks that Tiberius is going to reward him.
O' contrary, Tiberius has input to death and the secret buried.
And the justification for that is that if glass is unbreakable, then what will that do for glassmakers?
You know, it's very bad.
There's another story that's told of the Emperor Vespasian
that somebody approaches him and says
when they're trying to rebuild the Capitoline temple
that's been destroyed in the Great Fire in AD69
that I mentioned earlier.
I've developed this brilliant crane.
It's an excellent labour-saving device.
And again, it is said,
Vespasian refuses to use it
because it will put the common people of Rome out of work.
I mean, I don't think either of those stories
are likely to be true,
but the fact that they are told
clearly articulates a suspicion of technology as being the enemy of basically keeping, as the emperors and the elites of the classical world see it, keeping the lower orders busy and what will happen if they're not kept busy.
It's a kind of Luddite perspective, perhaps.
So I don't want to imply that I have studied this in any great or specific detail.
But my sense is that there is a strain of Ludditism in the classical world that makes them suspicious.
of anything that might lead to what might seem to be labor-saving.
Which, of course, you see, you know, in the earliest of the Industrial Revolution in Britain as well,
that's where Luddites are, people breaking mills and all kinds of things like that.
You know, and it's an anxiety that continues into the present day, doesn't it?
Of course.
Large language models.
They terrify many historians.
Yes, exactly.
So moving into the present day, you're involved in a pro-UK.
Union think tank called These Islands that wants to keep the United Kingdom together.
Do you feel that the devolution of so much?
political power to Scotland and Northern Ireland. In retrospect was a mistake.
No, I'm all in favour of devolution. I think that Britain, before the Second World War,
was a state in which power was devolved to Scotland, to Wales, to Northern Ireland,
but also to the great cities of England as well, to Birmingham. So Joseph Chamberlain,
the mayor of Birmingham, absolute kind of embodiment of a high-achieving mayor who shaped
and reconfigured the architecture and the industry of his city.
And I think that the challenge of defeating Hitler, the British state became so centralised
that we have long Second World War, if you want to put it like that, that the after
effects have continued for too long.
It's partly the Second World War.
It's partly the fact that we had a very centralising Labour government that wanted to
concentrate kind of power in its hands.
So the Health Secretary, you know, he institutionalised the National Health Service.
and he famously said that he, you know, he didn't want a nurse to change a bedpan in any hospital
across the country without him knowing about it. And I think that we live with the after effects of that.
And so therefore, actually, I'm all in favour of devolution. I don't think that devolution is the
enemy of the United Kingdom and the union of the constituent parts of the United Kingdom.
I think it's the best way for the United Kingdom to function properly. And I think that what we're
going through at the moment is the kind of process of teething problems. We're trying to
to kind of test and work it out. But it's, I think it's a creative process. And, you know,
I'm an optimist. I hope that it will work out for the best. But isn't Irish unification in
particular almost inevitable and we should just drip off the band-aid and get it over with?
Again, I think that the complexities of sophology in Ireland and specifically Northern Ireland
is way beyond my pay grade. It is incredibly complicated. And my understanding is that as
sectarian identity, so the proportion of people in Northern Ireland who identifies either Catholic or
Protestant fades, it doesn't translate automatically into a desire necessarily to remain in the
Union or to join a United Island, but that there is a solid core, nevertheless, that
prefers remaining in the UK to joining Ireland. And I think that that is further complicated by the
fact that in Ireland, Northern Ireland is now much poorer than Ireland itself. I think that
as I say, I'm not an expert on the sophology of this, but my hunch is that there would be
nervousness on the part of voters in Ireland as well as in Northern Ireland about the costs,
the challenges, the problems of doing it. I agree. I mean, it's often cast as though there's
a kind of inevitability. And if that is what people in Northern Ireland want, then that is absolutely
what people in Northern Irelanders have. But I think it's less inevitable than the kind of the
way in which the Protestant population is in decline, the Catholic population is growing. I don't
think it necessarily follows quite to the degree that I would say that anything about it is inevitable.
The Church of England so suffuses your government. Is it stable in the long run to have 5% or
fewer of the population attend that church and in some ways have Islam as the most influential
religion in, say, Britain? How's that going to work out 30, 40 years from now? Well, okay, so first
of all, I mean, Islam is in no way the most influential religion in Britain. Islam has been
radically Christianized in Britain. Muslims like Jews, like Hindus, like Christians indeed, have
freedom of religion. But what that means is that they are essentially obliged to see themselves as
belonging to a religion, in the case of Muslims as belonging to a religion called Islam.
Classically, that is not how Muslims understood what Islam was. Islam was an entire way of life.
Islam was not something to be kind of siphoned off from something called the secular and kind of ghettoized in that way.
O'Contrero, it was something that saturated everything.
This is the legacy of that little acorn that I was talking about when I said, talking about Jesus saying, render under Caesar.
This idea that there are two dimensions, that I mention that today we call the secular and the religious,
this is a legacy specifically of Christianity.
And so Muslims living in Britain to that extent are secularised. Of course there are Muslims who resent this.
You know, these are Muslims who tend to be categorized as extremists, as people who reject this idea that Islam should be just a religion,
who want to see the whole of Britain become subject to an Islamic state. But these are a tiny minority.
Most Muslims have internalized the idea of the secular in exactly the way that Jews have done or Hindus have done or indeed Catholics have done or Protestant.
have done. And so to that extent, I think that Muslims have been radically Protestantized. Now,
it may be that, you know, this is precisely the problem for the Church of England, that everything that
made it distinctive, everything that kind of made it the foundation stone of the English and then British
state that it became, no longer necessary. You don't need the Church of England for it. And I think
you could say more largely that this is a problem for Christians in Britain, and maybe in America as well,
that in a way they've won too comprehensively.
People don't need Christianity anymore to do all kinds of things.
By and large, it was the Church of England that was responsible for education,
often for healthcare, often for the provision of charity.
In Britain, all those have basically been nationalised.
You know, we have the state now, organizes education, healthcare benefits.
So what's the church for?
You know, that's an existential problem for the church.
However, I think that it's kind of clarified.
for me by the experience of the Queen's death and funeral and the morning period for her,
that I think suddenly, not everyone, there were lots of people who were very annoyed by it,
but lots of people were surprised by how moved they were by those whole two strange weeks
and actually quite liked it. They quite liked the sense of the weird that those two weeks
opened up. The body of a queen who's a lineal descendant of Alfred the Great,
and Odin and Adam, if her line of descent is to be trusted, lying in state, you know, in a parliament, you know, in the great hall built by the son of William the Conqueror, the great ceremony in Westminster Abbey built by Edward the confessor, the transfer of the body, laid a state in the chapel at Windsor where Henry the 8th and Charles I's bodies lie, that this sense of communion with the Christian past, the royal past, even Republicans.
quite enjoyed it. And I think the fact that only say, I don't know if it's 5%, I mean,
you're quoting me probably, I'm sure you got the figure right. I'm surprised it's actually
that high going to church. It's an estimate. Yeah. I think because people don't feel strongly about
the Church of England either way, by and large people are happy for it to stay where it is,
rather in the way that people don't particularly want to, you know, people may not be going to a large
church in the middle of a town, but that doesn't mean that they want to remove it and build a
supermarket there. As a historian, surely,
you value British heritage, the wonderfully manicured look of the English countryside, and for that
matter, the hedgehog. Yet my friends, my economist friends, tell me we need millions more of homes
in southern England because the cost of living is too high. Living standards are falling or stagnating.
Rent is an enormous problem. Should we just build more in southern England? What's your view?
Well, I'm not an economist. You are, so you will have a much more informed view on this.
I don't. And I'm aware of the argument.
I mean, I find it intriguing that the two areas of Europe that have the highest population density are also the two areas that first became capitalist.
So the Netherlands and Southeast England, in a way, these are the kind of the motor of the history of capitalism.
And clearly, I guess the sense of critical mass was very important to that.
But I think now, both the Netherlands and England, in a way, are too small.
If we had the space that you have in America, growth might be much easier.
easier than it's proving to be. And so that sets up for us a very painful decision about what matters
more, economic growth, economic success, the wealth, the employment that that gives people,
or the sustaining of the countryside and all those creatures that depend on the countryside.
And my feeling is, and it's an entirely romantic one, that I would not want to, you know,
argue before professor of economics, but I'm going to, is that for me, I feel that the humans who
live on the island that I live on, we're not the only species that inhabit this island, that
there are lots of animals and birds and insects and plants and trees that are bred of this island
too, and that we have a kind of responsibility for them. And I hate the impoverishment of our
wildlife of our biodiversity. If I particularly campaign for the hedgehogs, it's partly because
they are an inherently appealing animal. They're kind of snuffling the way that they run. It looks
as if they're lifting up skirts to do so. But it's also because I remember the garden of my childhood
where there would be hedgehogs, you know, you'd see hedgehogs all the time. I don't think my
children have ever seen a hedgehog. I was driving through the country in late summer last year.
and ahead of me on the road I saw a hedgehog
and it was the first time I'd seen a hedgehog for a long time
and it really paints me
and I feel we have a responsibility
not to allow an animal like the hedgehog to go extinct
and I think more than that if you want to talk in terms of human self-interest
a world in which biodiversity collapses
and one of the reasons why hedgehogs are going extinct
is because there aren't enough insects for them to eat
and insects of course are much less charismatic than hedgehogs
and so people tend not to get upset about them
but if we don't have insects if we don't have the thirons
things that animals depend upon, then that's not good for humans either. The cascade effect,
you know, we never know when it might suddenly ripple through. Three final questions. First,
what is your most unusual successful work habit? My most unusual successful work habit. When I
write history, I will go to libraries. I will immerse myself in academic texts, academic
study, I will read texts and books that are often kind of very demanding, written in very
academic prose. But I write for the general audience. And so there are times where I feel that I have
to emancipate myself from that. And I remember when I was writing my first book, Rubicon,
which was about the collapse of the Roman Republic, the great kind of the warlords of the late
Republic, Pompey, Caesar, Crassus, I would come back from the library and I'd sometimes feel
covered in the dust of the libraries in which I'd been sitting. And before starting work, I would
play any Amerioconi's music from the good, the bad and the ugly as I was making myself a cup of tea.
And I would particularly play two tracks. One is the kind of the lust for gold, where Tuko, the
ugly, is running around the cemetery, trying to find a grave where supposedly gold has been buried.
And I would always play that when I was writing about Krasis, who is the great billionaire. And then
when I was writing about the triumvirate,
kind of the standoff between the great warlords,
I would play the brilliant music
at the end of the good, the bad and the ugly
when there's a kind of seven minute shoot-off
between the good, the bad and the ugly.
And I would always feel better
going up to work, having listened to that.
And from that point on,
I've always trying to find pieces of music.
It will keep me in the mood of the world
in which I'm writing about,
but will also remind me that I'm writing for people
who may know nothing about it.
and I have to make it interesting and accessible.
Next, what is your favorite movie?
My favorite movie is, I think, Jurassic Park.
Why Jurassic Park?
I was havering over the good, the bad, and the ugly,
which I have actually watched.
It's a wonderful film.
Millions of times.
But I'll tell you why I love Jurassic Park.
So as a child, before I got into the Romans,
before I got into the Greeks,
I was obsessed by dinosaurs.
I was one of those kind of boys.
And I was a child at an age where,
there wasn't very much about dinosaurs.
You know, it weren't on the television very often.
I remember there was an open university course on paleontology,
you know, done by professors, so not at all aimed at children.
And they had one about dinosaurs,
and it was the most exciting program that I watched through the entire span of my childhood.
Anything about dinosaurs I was obsessed by.
And the films that were shown then were kind of,
the dinosaurs in them were not very good.
They were kind of slow, ponderous.
You could see that they'd be, you know, that kind of Ray Harryhausen type.
models. So when CGI enabled Spielberg to recreate dinosaurs in the way that he did in Jurassic Park,
for me it was a wonderful, wonderful moment. And you may remember in Jurassic Park,
the two paleontologists are in the Jeep. They're being taken by Richard Attenborough. And suddenly
they kind of hear a bellow and they look round and there's kind of famous sequence where Sam Neal
takes his hat off and kind of goes like that. And I hadn't yet seen any of the CGI
dinosaurs. And when they showed the brachiosaur coming up out of the lake and kind of leaning up
and feeding from the tree, the sense of wonder that Sam Neal was up, the character, Sam Neal's
character was obviously feeling, I felt that sense of wonder. I was so moved. I was moved almost
to tears. And I think, you know, as a film, I've just watched it over and over and over again,
because that sense of wonder has never entirely left me. I will again remind our audience members
of Tom's current book, Dominion, how the Christian Revolution remade the world,
But the final question is, after that, what will you do next?
Well, I am carrying on with my own podcast.
The rest is history, as I said.
We've just done three episodes on the Cathars.
We have various episodes coming up,
some with definitely an American bent.
So we're doing some episodes on Ronald Reagan.
We've got the fall of Saigon to come.
So all kinds of things like that.
And I'm able to do that and to devote myself to that
because I've just finished a third book
in the series of books that I've written on Roman history.
So the first Rubicon was about the fall.
the Roman Republic mentioned that. The second dynasty was dynasty, I guess I should say,
was about the family of Augustus ending with the death of Nero. And this new book, Pax,
is about the heyday of the Roman Empire. So it runs from the death of Nero up to the time of Hadrian.
So it covers the year of the four emperors, the sack of Jerusalem, Pompeii, the Colosseum,
Hadrian's War, so lots of great stuff. And that is out in America in October.
Tom Holland, thank you very much.
Thank you so much for having me. Great honor.
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