Gone Medieval - The Birth of the Medieval World
Episode Date: November 14, 2025Matt Lewis pays a visit to Gone Medieval's sister podcast The Ancients for a lively debate with Tristan Hughes about the blurred boundary between the ancient and medieval worlds. Can Tristan champion ...Roman Emperor Justinian as an Ancient? What about Charlemagne? Which period can lay claim to the worst year in history? And was there a single moment when people woke up and realised they'd entered a new era?Watch this episode on The Ancients YouTube channelMOREWhy the Early Middle Ages MatterListen on AppleListen on SpotifyWhat are the High Middle Ages?Listen on AppleListen on SpotifyGone Medieval is presented by Matt Lewis. This episode edited by Rob Weinberg. The producers are Rob Weinberg and Joseph Knight. The senior producer is Anne-Marie Luff.All music used is courtesy of Epidemic Sounds.Gone Medieval is a History Hit podcast.Sign up to History Hit for hundreds of hours of original documentaries, with a new release every week. Sign up at https://www.historyhit.com/subscribe. You can take part in our listener survey here: https://insights.historyhit.com/history-hit-podcast-always-on Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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From long-loss Viking ships and kings buried in unexpected places
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Hello, I'm Matt Lewis. Welcome to Gone Medieval from History Hit, the podcast that delves
into the greatest millennium in human history. We've got the most intriguing mysteries,
the gobsmacking details and latest groundbreaking research from the Vikings to the printing press,
from kings to popes to the crusades. We cross centuries and continents to delve into
rebellions, plots and murders to find the stories big and small that tell us how we got here.
Find out who we really were. We've gone medieval.
Welcome to this episode of Gone Medieval. Today we've got something for you that we've never done
before. I was invited onto our sister podcast, The Ancients, to talk about the blurry, fuzzy
boundary between the ancient and medieval worlds with my good friend Tristan Hughes. This is a bit
like Ghostbusters crossing the streams. It'll either work or it'll destroy all of us.
We had a robust debate about whether some specific dates and people should be thought of as
ancient or medieval. It was interesting to get into the weeds of it and uncover just how
unclear the border really is. If you don't listen to the ancients, then I can't recommend it highly
enough. The Tristorian has great guests over there covering everything from dinosaurs to the
fall of Rome. This episode is our discussion and I'd love to hear what you think. Are there other
dates or people that we could have included. Should I afford harder for any of them to be medieval?
Let me know after you've enjoyed listening to the episode. Welcome to the ancients. Today we have a
special treat because I am joined by my esteemed, but sometimes confused when it comes to dates,
colleague Matt Lewis, historian and host of the Gone Medieval podcast, to have a frank discussion
on the most awkward period in Western history. We're talking about a messy 500-year-long process between
300 and 850 AD, which my people might call the decline and fall of the ancient world,
the end of antiquity. His people, however, call it the early Middle Ages. We know this is a deeply
nuanced and complex period that evolved uniquely across different places and at different
paces. The world didn't just go to sleep one night ancient and wake up the next day medieval.
Listen, I know that. Matt knows that. You know that. However, our producers
want to fight and have placed in my hand a stack of key people and events for us to
battle over and claim for our own. We will be debating whether these moments represent collapse
or continuity. This could get ugly, but HR is on standby. Matt, great to have you on the show.
Are you ready for it? It's fantastic to be here. Let's go. Let's correct some of your theories.
But also, you're not confused most of the time. It's just I get competitive.
when it comes to this time period.
How are you feeling?
I've got the bruises
to prove how competitive you get.
Don't say that.
HR are right there.
That makes me sound very bad.
But okay, no, let's go straight into it.
So we're going to talk through these dates
and discuss do we think they're ancient,
do we think they're medieval
and the whole process behind it.
Fantastic.
And it is such an interesting period.
I must admit,
my main area being, I guess,
outside doing the general interviews
being much earlier on
with like Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic period.
But, you know, still being fascinated
in actually figuring out when antiquity ends
and it being so often linked to ancient Roman
and the Roman Empire and when the Middle Ages begins.
It's a fascinating kind of period to talk about.
It is, and I'm in the same boat in that,
if I'm an expert in anything, it's the late medieval period.
So I'm working backwards to try and work out
how we arrived at the late medieval period.
But, you know, we've both spoken to a lot of incredibly clever people
about this mushy area in the middle.
And I think we can hopefully try and glean what's yours
and what's mine.
Like you say, we've had,
fisty cuff's before in the office about we have.
Stay away from this topic or that topic, isn't it?
Always fair in love and war, that's the quote.
I think also the fact that this will be our enthusiast's opinions on the matter.
There'll be lots of avenues for disagreement and encourage people to comment and, you know,
give their thoughts as well.
Yeah, yeah. Fight us in the comments.
Absolutely.
Like, the team have given us a number of cards.
I don't know what's on them.
I certainly don't know, unless you've had a peak.
But my hunch is that there will probably be a series of dates and,
statements and we have to decide whether it's ancient or medieval territory and we can fight it out.
So with all that being said, should we get into it? Let's get stuck in.
All right. Okay. This feels like going quite far ahead. An 8th century date, first of all,
we've got 732 AD. You're not having that. Get out. I don't think I can claim that anyway.
And it's got the Basil of Tours and Charles Martel.
So this is very much early medieval territory.
I'm not going to fight this one.
Yeah, so we're on the verge of the emergence of a Frankish nation
and those kinds of ideas.
They're coming together of those fractured small kingdoms
that had emerged after the fall of Rome.
And Charles Martel is fighting battles against Islam
coming in from southern Spain and all of those kinds of things as well.
So there's a little bit in there about the friction
between Christianity and Islam early on,
a little bit about defining nationhood
and all of that kind of thing.
But I feel like that's firmly medieval territory
and you need to back off.
Completely.
You've had the spread of Islam already, haven't you?
And, you know, all the way to Morocco
and then into Spain,
if there were any Frankish leaders
who I could contest and maybe say
is in the ancient world still,
maybe Clovis early on
in the forming of the Frankish kingdom.
But you're right, isn't it?
It's that transition from that mosaic
of different babes.
Barian Visigoths, Burgundians, Frankish kingdoms,
into something the more powerful,
like the Frankish kingdom that becomes France.
And I guess maybe you would put it in there
because this is when the map of Western Europe
starts to look a little bit more like something we would recognise.
You can almost plot France on a map and that kind of thing.
But I feel like there is a lot of medieval territory to get there.
There's a statement here.
It's like, sets in stone the borders of medieval Western Europe.
Do we think that's fair with the Basel of Tour?
How seismic it is?
I mean, they're always moving a little bit.
But it is, in terms of the Muslims who were in southern Spain,
will remain there for 700 years after this battle.
So it does settle the limits of where Islam is encroaching into southern Iberia.
And as I say, around the time of Charles Martel,
you've got something that looks very much like France beginning to emerge.
But nothing else is very settled yet, I don't think.
No, completely.
I don't think we need to hand any more time on this because I'm not contesting it.
That's yours.
There you go.
You can take it.
But you get the ancients logo on now.
We keep in score.
Is that 1-0?
I guess that's 1-0.
I think that's not really fair, though.
So 32-80.
Well, let's see what the next one is.
Okay, this is more interesting, and this is one I certainly will fight for.
476 AD now.
Does that ring a bell?
So that's the fall of the Roman Empire?
Full of the Western Roman Empire.
Well, it's the date of, I mean, the last Roman Emperor in the West,
Romulus Augustulus, giving up his throne, abdicating to Odoaka.
And then, like, there's no further Western Roman Emperor.
But, of course, the Roman Empire does continue.
at pace in the East. I think it's Emperor Zeno, who's ruling at the time. And Oduaka,
of all people, actually then seeks kind of almost, dare I say, permission from the Emperor
Zeno and what to do in Italy. So there's still very much respect to that Roman rule there in the
East and it's still as strong as ever, which is why I say, I would say that this is still ancient
history. There's a tendency to say that is this actually the cut-off point. If people want to pinpoint
a date for the fall of the Western Roman Empire, 4-7-6 AD, is.
the traditional date.
Yeah, it's one of those really convenient pins in the map that you can put on a timeline
and you can just hang the division between ancient and medieval on that.
But if I was to suggest that that's becoming a medieval period,
I would suggest that we have previously had problems for Rome.
Rome has been sacked.
Rome is already a lame duck.
It's just waiting to be put out of its misery, I guess.
I remember talking to Dr. David Gwynn about this and another filmed episode on the origins
of the fall of Rome.
a series we did earlier this year.
And also Adrian Goldsworthy, he talked about this as well.
Basically highlighting, as you say,
the emperor's a lame duck by this point.
It's the power of the Fiderati,
you know, these people who are in the service of these figureheads,
but they've had power for some time
and they just, Odo Wacker just decides
there's actually no need for this little kid anymore.
But it's certainly not the end of ancient history,
I would argue at that time,
because there's no kind of dissolution of Roman beliefs
or values, the mosaic of kingdoms that emerges in Western Europe at that time,
as we talk like the Visigoths in Spain.
You ultimately get the Ostrogoths and Theoderic the Great in Italy and Clovis and the Franks.
They still got clear like embracing of Roman values and ideas.
There's no kind of clear cutoff point.
The only exception to that we might suppose later is Britain,
where there is a clearer cutoff point.
So I would say that the whole of the 5th century,
if we're taking a Eurocentric view,
which I think we largely will be
with terms like medieval and ancient, aren't we?
In that sphere, I would argue that the whole of the 5th century
on the continent, European continent at least,
is to ancient history.
It's a tricky one though, isn't it?
Because what leads to Rome falling in 476,
it's the emergence of a different mindset,
a different way of doing things
that has been attacking Rome for decades by this point.
So something has changed, something in the way that people are living has changed.
And I think it's important, we are going to be mainly in Western Europe.
The medieval period is a term for Western Europe, really.
And we're not talking about everyone going to bed wearing Togas and waking up in the morning and thinking, well, that's stupid.
I'm going to put some hose on and dress completely differently.
It's not like an overnight thing.
But if I was going to make a claim on 476 tipping over into the medieval world,
it's that it's a medieval mindset that has already emerged that is causing Rome to be.
dragged down. That is a good point and maybe that kind of harkens back to the overarching
idea that it is a transitional phase, you know, over a long period of time. It is
complicated, it's complex, and maybe 476, well actually, almost likely, certainly, it's nearer
the beginning than the end of that whole transitional phase, I'd argue, which will go into
the sixth century as well, and sure we'll visit it in time. So as you're right, the forming of
the medieval world is certainly there by this point. We've,
those kingdoms that the Visigoths and the Franks and so on.
But I wouldn't say that this is clear-cut medieval like that one is.
So I would say that yes, maybe it is in the transitional phase,
but I would still put it in ancient territory.
I'll give you a one-all.
A one-all, okay, okay.
I mean, you're a Birmingham city fan, so you need every help you can get.
So good.
111 points last season.
Not so good this season.
Too used to winning, that's the problem.
Right, should we move on to the next one?
What have we got?
Okay, I'm a bit more confident about this one.
We're going back to the third century.
So 286 AD.
So a bit of context, because I know this is really out of your comfort zone.
Okay.
This is known as the end of the third century crisis.
So this is a time, can I appear roughly of 50 years, where you've had more than 25 emperors rise and fall.
I think only one dies of natural causes.
The rest are done away with either assassinations, poisonings, or killed in battle and usurpers and so on.
it's epitomized as a period of great instability
where the Roman Empire could easily have fallen
and wars close to falling and there were certain points in the third century
where the Roman Empire is divided into three
when you have like breakaway states like Palmyra in the East with Zanobia
and the Gallic Empire Britain as well is cut away
but it holds together because you do see
and once again this is largely regurgitating the work
of the brilliant Dr David Gwyn
who did a lovely interview about this.
You have the works of figures like two particular emperors,
Galeanus and Orridian,
who work hard to kind of reform and sort out the empire
when it's at its weakest in the two 60s and 70s,
and it unites.
So the Roman Empire does come through this period of crisis.
And arguably, or not arguably at all,
by the time you do get to the 4th century,
it's stronger than ever.
And everyday Roman wouldn't have thought
that empire was in decline at that point.
Yeah.
I was going to ask the question.
as to whether that could be viewed as the beginning of the end,
if it was a moment of crisis that saw a lot of reshaping,
but if the Roman Empire is coming out of it stronger,
I guess it's more difficult for me to position it as the beginning of the end
and perhaps the beginning of the emergence of the...
No, but you are kind of right,
because this is kind of the clear Kasaf point where we say,
like, now, this is late antiquity, right?
You know, this is away from your time of your Marcus Aurelius,
your Septimius, Severeus, Trajan, Hadrian,
this is a time when Christianity is about to come to the fore.
you have more clear-cut divisions of power, I would argue, as well.
There's more often than not times where you have multiple emperors.
The end of the third century is defined by the tetraarchy,
which is Diocletian dividing the empire first into two,
senior Augusti, and then into four with two junior rulers as well.
Which in some ways is a precedent for what will come later
with the splintering of small petty kingdoms emerging.
You've suddenly got this idea that there isn't one single figure
who rules over everything in a divinely appellation.
pointed kind of way, there is an idea that there can be a separation of all of that and that
there can be more than one ruler ruling over this whole territory, which is where the medieval
mind gets to with the splintering of all of this and all the small petty kingdoms, where the
Roman Empire smashes apart. It's like a thousand pieces of glass and eventually it starts
being pieced together. Yeah, I mean, there will be some exceptions. I mean, the rule of
Constantine the Great, of course, Theodosius the Great as well. But usually they find that the
empire is just too big that one person can't deal with it, the fracturing of it.
And yes, that will then just kind of go to the next level as you get to the fifth century and then, you know, it's funny.
This idea of breakaway states is nothing new to the Romans by the time they get to the fourth century.
As I mentioned Britain earlier, look at Corrosius, who led a breakway state in Britain right around this time, 286.
But as you say, it just becomes more, I guess, the norm?
It sounds like there's a recognition from the centre as well, rather than it being someone breaking away and Rome needing to drag them back into.
compliance, there's a recognition at the centre in Rome that more than one person is maybe needed
to rule all of this.
Yes, and then sometimes there are times where they have too much on their plate that they
can't, I mean, Roman Britain look to your own defences and all that kind of stuff, right?
Seagrius and northern France.
Sounds dangerously medieval.
Yes.
This is the problem with dates, because if I then said, you've also put a good argument
there for like, you can see kind of formations of medieval world even back in in the late
third century.
but if I've already gone for 476,
we'd have to do renegotiation if you then say that this is medieval.
I don't think that would be quite fair, but what do you think about it?
That's going to have to be an ancient date,
but I think it really plays into this idea that it's a much longer transition
than we think it is,
that it's going to become harder and harder to hang it off one date,
whether that's 476 or any other date.
We're looking at a whole period of cultural, societal, political change and evolution
rather than a single cut-off date.
It's going to make the rest of this chat quite tricky.
I mean, completely, and I'd also argue a transition,
but getting out to this linear idea
that it's a downward decline consistently.
The transition, you could argue,
is starting by the end of the third century
and into the fourth century.
But Rome is, yes, although there's the division of power,
yes, the army's different to the one
you might think from gladiator and the like,
but is it actually weaker?
Do you argue absolutely not?
you know, the amount of, you know,
it's still a strong entity.
It is just changing in its format,
key period, which will ultimately,
you will see evidence of enduring into the medieval world.
Right, okay, on to the next one.
So, 410 AD.
So this is one where we can kind of,
we can negotiate stuff around if we feel we need to.
Do you know anything about 410 AD?
Is this a sack of Rome?
It is the sack of Rome.
The first.
A sack of Rome.
A sack of Rome.
You can do it more than once, surely.
But psychologically, this is the hammer.
blow. Like this is
the first time Rome has been sacked
in some 700 years since
the Gauls under a guy called
Brennis in around 390
BC. Right?
So Rome has forged an empire in that time
in the Republican period. It's defeated all the old
great enemies like Hannibal, the
Macedonians, Cleopatra,
Augustus, the Trajan.
All those big names have existed
in that more than half a century
since Rome itself was
assaulted and, you know,
kind of subjected to a military attack in what the Romans would have considered ancient history.
And is this the Vandals?
It's 410 the Vandals?
Wash your mouth out with soap.
How dare you?
No.
This is the Goths.
The goths.
Visigoths, I guess you could say.
Vizagoths is more later.
We just say the Goths.
The vandals is later, though, and you do hit an important point.
I think that's four, five, six.
But Rome is sacked twice in the period of 50 years.
And actually that vandal's sack of Rome,
by Gyserick and the Vandals
is worse than the 410 sack
in regards to the devastation and destruction
but the 410 one by Alarick and his followers
is
psychologically a hammer blow because it's that first time
Rome has actually been attacked and sacked
I don't think the sacking is that brutal
I'm sure people disagree it said I'm not a leading expert
I'm just trying to remember what David Gwynne told me
as he's one of the leading lights on this
and Peter Heather as well we interviewed both
pretty recently on it
But it's the fact of Rome being sacked, not how badly it was sacked.
It's the fact that there is now a rival making its way into the very heart of the Roman Empire,
which again, as we talked about before, 7, 6, this plays into the idea that something has already changed and happened
for the Goths to be there to assault Rome.
Are the Goths are medieval people?
Because if there are medieval people attacking Rome, are we in the medieval world?
Well, are the Goths are medieval people?
I don't think you could say that.
but it's like the beginning of a trend of mass migrations into the Roman Empire.
The Roman Empire has dealt with migrations before and brought people in.
There's been trouble on the frontiers before.
They've always brought people in.
But it's the scale of them now that's, you know, sending them over the edge.
Poor decision making as well.
I mean, the reason that Alaric and the Goths ultimately end up there is they've already had a quite a gazump, I'm sure you say, or a blitz around the Balkans and the Eastern Roman Empire, the defeat of the Valens.
at the Battle of Adrianople a few decades earlier.
But the point I was going to say is
it's not that brutal attacking.
You know, they don't attack the churches.
The Goths are Christian.
Alaric had been trying to avoid a sack of Rome.
He'd been negotiating with the emperor.
The emperor's not there.
Rome has lost its kind of,
part of its importance is gone by the early 5th century.
Ravenna and Milan have been kind of new centres of power
for the rulers in the West.
Rome is symbolic.
It's the symbolic nature of it that is so devastating.
But I think there's a point there in the fact
that, you know, it is the start of a trend.
It feels like maybe 410 is the alarm clock going off
and the Roman Empire kind of rolling over and hitting snooze.
Yes.
But maybe they should have woken up a bit earlier.
I think so.
Well, whether they could have,
because, of course, by 410,
you've also got other groups crossing the Rhine
a couple of years earlier.
Does Rome have the capacity in the West
to deal with all these different threats?
You have the Huns as well.
They'll also invade Italy.
Attila will evade Italy as well for a bit as well.
So, as you say, it's the start of a process
where Italy is no longer the safe area,
you know, no one can touch, it's the
flourishing centre.
It does hammer
away the invincible nature of Rome
and this idea which I think was
very much there in most people's minds
apart from a select few
I think Augustine of Hippo's one
no one could fathom the Roman Empire
falling. You know, it just wasn't
in their vocabulary and then this maybe
sets a few more alarm bells ringing that maybe we're
seeing the transition into something different
which maybe could that kind of go into the point
of a medieval world coming?
Yeah, the medieval world is coming for Rome
and this is entering Rome,
sacking Rome and proving itself a rival for Rome.
Have you got any other thoughts on this?
From your medieval mindset?
It's tricky, isn't it?
I mean, I guess part of the question is
what are we talking about changing
when we think about changing to the medieval world?
And there's a degree to which it's about
a little bit of trade and commerce and stuff as well
in that it feels to me, as a complete non-expert,
like Rome has become the centre of consumption,
but it produces absolutely nothing.
So we're moving to an economy
in which rather than rich people producing everything
that they need on their own villas and estates
and buying in everything from abroad,
we're changing to a place in which people are indulging in commerce
and trade on a much wider scale
and producing things and making things.
And has that happened yet?
I don't think it has.
I think you're quite right.
I think, but it is just one of those standout dates, isn't it,
that we often associate with the end of ancient Rome.
and I'm as guilty as anyone to love a solid date for something.
It's like if you wanted to pinpoint a date,
we talked earlier about 476 being like the end of the Roman Empire in the West.
I think 410 is another one of those because, as you say,
nothing completely different has changed as such.
The Goths will go away,
but they will then pave out their own kingdom in southern France.
You know, that lays the future for the Visigoths in Spain, right?
And so that's very medieval times.
from my perspective
it'll be interesting
to see what people think
476
if you did an episode
on 476
on gone medieval
I might be like
okay
but I get it
I completely understand it
because I can see
the point being made
that
you know
it's a date which we pinpoint
to the end of antiquity
it's certainly now
actually within that
transitional phase
to what you see
as in the medieval times
410 I'd probably be a bit like
not sure about that
It's almost like you're doing an episode about the worst year to be alive in the 6th century.
Maybe we'll get to that in a bit.
Yeah, yeah, exactly.
You're quite right.
Or even maybe events in the early 7th century in West Asia.
I think I'm going to have to let you keep that one, though.
I think I'm going to have taken another hit on this.
And lo and behold, another card has appeared.
Emperor Justinian.
Yeah, this is all bets are off, fisty cuffs.
You could be coming for me with this one.
Yeah, make your case.
We've done an episode on Gomadeeval.
Oh, is that it?
Wonderful, Peter Saras. That is my case. Hand it over.
Justinian is a really, really interesting one. So by Zantine Emperor, effectively Emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire.
So we have to concede here that the Roman Empire still exists in its eastern form.
Justinian is really interesting. He goes through phases of trying to recapture the Roman Empire,
but only parts of it that are economically important. So around the Mediterranean fringe, the south of Spain and Italy and the north of Africa.
He seems to have recognised that you need to cut some of the provinces loose that aren't bringing in enough money.
And he focuses his efforts on getting back, definitely Italy, which is the spiritual heart of the Roman Empire.
But the rest of his efforts are focused on the bits that make money.
North Africa, isn't it, that area, yeah.
Yeah, and southern Spain.
And he's really keen to get those back in order to fund his own imperial exercise in the east.
Justinian is really interesting, though, because I think we have someone here who is thoroughly and devotedly
Christian in a very medieval sense. So lots of the early doctrine that we get and lots of the early
theological debates about medieval Christianity come from Justinian's court. What we think of largely as a
lot of Roman law and jurisprudence is what Justinian distills it down to. And it again emerges from his
court. So Justinian law will form the basis of European civil law for more than a millennium.
after him, you know, it's still the basis of some systems of civil law in Europe today.
So here is a man who is, you know, literally sitting in his office with a bit of paper designing the medieval world.
So interesting, isn't it?
God, when you put it like that, it's, he is seismic for that change and everything he goes to as well.
It almost feels like part of it, he is he is hearkening back to the ancient Roman heyday and, it's a reclaiming those lands, seeing him just as the clear successor.
but him personally transforming the world around him.
Yeah, and his background, I think, is interesting as well.
You know, he comes from an incredibly impoverished family in the Balkans.
His uncle goes off to the imperial court, rises in the imperial guard, calls for his nephew.
You know, I can get him a job over here, get him a good education.
And so he rises from complete obscurity and poverty to become the emperor of the Byzantine Empire.
And there's a medieval story in that,
because what is the early medieval period,
but the fight for the right to rule everywhere,
where almost anybody,
if you're smart enough or strong enough,
can become a king.
I would argue you can see that also, though,
in the late period of ancient history as well,
with usurpers and the like.
But maybe, as you say,
Justinian is just another, like a case of that to an extreme
because of how powerful an empire he rules.
It is interesting to think of whether
the change from antiquities,
to medieval period,
you know, kind of really,
you really see a big spark in that
during Justinian's reign
and by infamous events
like the Justinian Plague,
the Plague Justinian that breaks out.
Because of how devastating it is,
because of how something like that,
well, it is a black death plague,
isn't it?
Carried by the fleas on rats and it's...
What's more medieval than a plague?
Well, I mean, that's thing,
but it does, I mean, the law code
and everything,
as well, I'm no expert on this, but
it does feel that you have
that conglomeration of
game-changing events that happen
in his long reign, that you
do see
Rome is never the same again
in a way, right? Yeah. I would also
concede here that the ancient
world kind of never goes away in the medieval world.
Medieval people
would never have called themselves medieval. They wouldn't have been looking
for dates like this. They see
a degree of continuity and they are obsessed
with ancient Rome, with the
architecture with building in stone as a projection of power that never ever goes away,
particularly later in the medieval period when Western Europe comes back into contact with
ancient Greek and Roman writings after the Crusades.
They are absolutely obsessed with all of that.
And we get Romanesque architecture, building castles and churches, because they're obsessed.
So it isn't that people suddenly turn away from the ancient world.
The question is, is this a medieval man living in an ancient world or ancient man living in a
medieval world. And I would argue that he is a medieval man who is reshaping his empire to fit with
the new medieval world that is around him. I think that's spot on. I can see the logic of that,
but I can't say I think that's spot on from a degree of authority, but I can see what you mean.
It is the case, isn't it? When I think of Justinian, I might also think of the Nica riots,
but, you know, of course, that's a chariot race, isn't it? It works for a chariot race,
and you think chariots think ancient Rome. So you can see the ancient rites. You can see the
ancient element still there. I think Belisarius
is sometimes dubbed the last Roman
but there's always so many people who are dubbed the last Roman
but in that kind of I think a classical
ancient sense that last
attempt to retake those
former Roman lands in the heartlands
of North Africa and Sicily and Italy
and the success it brings
you know for a time
they retake Rome I think 536
so symbolically
60 years after
the deposition of
Romulus Augustulus so there's a
a link there. I hope I've got my dates right there. So there's something very symbolic there,
an idea to say, oh no, we're going to get things back to normal. You know, you've had these
Ostrogoths in Italy, but we're back now. I think with Justinian, what you get is a desire to
still connect with all of that from the past, but a recognition that there's now a new way of doing
everything. And the fact that, you know, it doesn't last. Because you have all those other new
powers who are much stronger than they were before, north of the outs, the Lombards, and
Franks and so on and so forth,
who, you know, kind of makes that not be the case
that they lose Italy quite soon afterwards.
I think I can give you this.
I think so.
I think that's more.
I have no regrets about doing 541 AD
the worst year in history on the ancients podcast
because I think you can say
that there is still an ancient world
before the bubonic plague.
And I think Justinian is an interesting figure
to hang a discussion around
the fact that that transition from ancient to medieval
must happen in different places at different times.
at different paces.
Again, we're not talking about, you know,
the sun goes down on one day on an ancient world
and rises on a medieval one.
Yeah, completely.
Should we do the next one?
Yes, go for it.
Oh, this should be quite easy.
Charlemagne, I'm not claiming him.
You don't want it?
No, not at all.
When is he?
How much further on is he?
So we're around 800 here.
He's his coronation in the year 800.
And I guess why he's in there
is because he will have himself crowned
as a Roman emperor.
You know, he is making the first maybe serious effort to reconfigure, to rebuild what was once the Western Roman Empire.
You know, he has what we would call today all of kind of Germany to France and all of the bits and pieces in between.
He brings all of those back together and is keen to identify himself as a successor to Rome.
So clearly in Charlemagne's mind, the ancient world still means something.
it's something that you still want to recapture.
It still symbolises power and authority and continuity
and certainty and strength
and all of those things that are a king and emperor will want to project.
But again, is he just using all of those notions
to give him a step up in the medieval world?
Yeah, I think that just further affirms
that this is very much a medieval period
because they're hearkening back to the memory of something now gone.
And also, who crowned Charlemagne?
The Pope.
The Pope, exactly, something completely alien to ancient rulers, I'd say.
So I've not disputing that at all.
He's clearly a medieval figure.
I guess one of the big titans of early medieval history, right?
He is, he's absolutely huge.
And, you know, engaging in thoroughly medieval battles,
what we would recognise as medieval battles.
How big are these battles?
Are they on the scale of ancient Rome?
Probably not, no.
We're in a time pit.
It's hard to get numbers for medieval battles.
It's probably easier for some Roman battles.
than it is for some medieval battles,
they're notoriously bad at giving us numbers,
and so it gets really, really difficult to pin them down.
But in this kind of period,
you're quite often talking about handfuls of knights on horses.
You know, it could be 20, 30 people
who are the serious elite involved in the fighting here.
So you're talking about small-scale battles most often.
Charlemagne does, you know, he's, again, he's working to push back
the Islamic presence in southern Iberia,
so he's recognizing that there are boundaries to his empire
and wanting to push back and push around.
I think he's using the ancient world, but he's a medieval man.
I think this also harkens to another thing that I commonly associate with medieval versus ancient,
which is the clear decline in army size and the complexities of certain military exercises and campaigns.
Now, I can't say that for everything because I don't know.
But from an outsider looking in, it feels like when he gets to the early medieval,
period that the armies, they're not on the scale of earlier Roman imperial expeditions
against Parthia or Sasanian Persia and the like.
Which, as you said, is that testament to that new, I'm not using the dreaded F word,
feudal word until there because that's me being an idiot.
But maybe the system's power, right?
I mean, you can use the F word.
But I think the key thing there is that the key marker is that Rome has a standing army
paid for by the empire.
Throughout the medieval period,
you simply don't have countries
till very, very late,
having anything that resembles a standing army.
You're raising the feudal levies,
you're calling in people who owe you allegiance
and owe you military service
to act as your army.
So there's a clear divide there,
I think, between the ancient world
where regimes had standing armies
that they trained and paid for
and could deploy wherever they wanted to.
And the medieval world,
where this is a much more kind of makeshift,
you don't incur the cost of a huge standing army.
Do you think that's also what makes Belisarius' expedition to North Italy
and Italy ultimately so remarkable
because it feels like an ancient history military expedition,
you know, but in a changing world,
but this idea that you could send,
I mean, you might not see it until maybe the Crusades later or something like that,
where you can get an army from a power, you know,
to ferry across the Mediterranean,
and then start a campaign afresh.
I'm hearkening back also to doing Rome 2 Total War
and the Belisarius campaign.
But I hope you know what I mean.
It's that idea that such an idea may feel
unfathomable to early medieval periods.
I'm sure there are like the Normans and Scyth might be a contrast,
but I don't know, but it does lean into again
what we're saying that the ancient world hasn't gone away.
People are recognising that there's a need to do things
in a new and different way,
but that doesn't mean you can't try the old stuff.
throughout the medieval period,
the prevailing military wisdom is vegetius
from the end of the Roman Empire.
They will completely and utterly lean on him
until the end of the medieval period.
So there is still a recognition
that the ancient world knew how to do some things.
Very true.
All right, well, let's keep going on.
Okay, this is an interesting one.
Emperor Constantine, so early 4th century.
Wait, did you just steal Charlemagne?
Yeah, sorry, I did.
My bad.
That's yours.
Yeah, that wouldn't look good, would it?
You've got your three there.
You've got Justinian, Charlemagne, and Battle of Tour.
Okay, good.
I've got my pal here.
Yes, Emperor Constantine,
what main achievements?
Yes, the Battle of the Milvian Bridge,
what's he most associated with Christianity?
And it would always be debated, you know,
why he embraces Christianity,
the Milvian Bridge,
the Cairo story, Eusebius, and so on.
But he does, he's part of the tetrarchy,
that rule of four, that mentioned earlier,
but then, after a series of civil wars,
becomes the sole ruler of Roman Empire
in the fourth century.
Obviously his other big legacy is the founding of Constantinople,
the renaming of Byzantium to Constantinople
and then making his own seat of power.
Although it will not,
straight away be like the great center of the Roman Empire.
Once again, David Gwynne, encyclopedia on this stuff,
saying how Theodosius the Great,
so much later in the fourth century is more that Constantinople
is clearly the center.
But the question here is,
does he lay the foundations, I guess,
for the Eastern Roman, the Byzantine Empire.
I would be tempted, controversially,
to make a hard play for Constantine.
Would you? Interesting.
So you're going to make a play for 3, 2, 8th, you know, early 14th century?
In that, what is the medieval period,
but the story of the emergence and the ascendancy of the Roman church,
the adoption of Christianity is the beginning of that process.
And when I said earlier that, you know, as far as I'm aware,
you know, Rome has this economy that doesn't kind of produce and export anything,
the sudden realization that it needs to produce an export,
something comes along and what does it export, it exports religion, Christianity.
And who starts that, Constantine does.
Here is a man who is realising that Rome needs to change.
And here is a man who gives it its main export.
He was a man who realised that Rome needs to change,
even though Christians are just like 5% of the empire's population at the time.
I guess it's ahead of his time.
I think he's David Potter interviewed one of the first interviews ever did on the podcast.
I remember him saying this.
I mentioned how he thinks Constantine was hedging his bets.
You know, you'll see coins, you know,
he's a clear link to Christianity.
Only gets baptized when he's on his deathbed.
So in the 3 30s.
You also have coins of Constantine, I think it's with Solimvictus and the like.
So I'd still say it's a transitional faith.
I get what you mean now.
But he's set in motion.
Yes.
The things that will ultimately define the medieval period.
He does.
I think you could do a legacy of Constantine,
and that would be medieval,
because he's such a big figure.
I couldn't say
I would not be allowed to get away
with saying that Constantine the Great
is a medieval figure ahead of his time
because he's still very much in that imperial system.
He reverts to one-man rule
of the entire empire
and he's successful,
largely because there aren't any big threats
from the Persians or on the Rhine at that time.
I'd also say someone who's,
you know, there's a couple of other kings around him
until he beats them up and becomes sole ruler
is very medieval.
Would you?
Well, yeah, yeah, but,
Rome also has precedence for doing that
with rival claimants for the throne.
You've got so many civil wars.
I just feel like you're getting too many here.
Just making a bid for Constantine.
Put them in the middle.
In the middle.
All right, fine.
You'd have to think very carefully
how you did a gone medieval episode
about Constantine the Great.
That's all I'll say.
Otherwise you'd ambush me in the office again.
Who did what?
This is a very interesting one though.
So 628, 630s, West Asia.
which, you know, is the Arab conquests.
Rise of Islam.
Would you like to say something first about it?
I think this is perhaps one of the most interesting things
because I think lots of people will immediately think that has to be medieval.
Medieval.
But the rise of Islam on the borders of the Eastern Roman Empire
is fascinating because the medieval world, like I say,
after the Crusades, when the medieval world in Western Europe
comes back into contact with,
with lots of the teachings of Rome and Greece,
they get that from their Muslim enemies.
And I think the Muslims would argue
there's this kind of mini-enlightment in Western Europe
when all of that knowledge and power comes back.
I think Muslims in the Near East would argue
that they never forgot all of that ancient wisdom
in the way that Western Europe had.
They come into contact with the Eastern Roman Empire,
and as far as they're concerned,
it's still the Roman Empire.
I think there are lots of ways,
as much as I hate shooting myself in the foot,
I think there are lots of interesting ways
in which the Arab world
has a stronger connection
to the ancient world
than medieval Europe does by this point.
It's interesting because we're doing that geographic shift,
aren't we? This is the first one
when we're kind of talking beyond Europe
and the Mediterranean basin.
And you do make the point how, you know,
before that, you have a situation in West Asia that has been there for centuries.
The fact that you've got west of the Euphrates, the Romans, and east of the Euphrates, the Persians,
right?
And it's been that kind of fighting back and forth for centuries, whether it's Asanians, Parthians,
well, those are the main two with the Romans, aren't they?
So it is very interesting that you have that context of, you can argue, two ancient superpowers.
So when we did do this episode on the ancients recently,
we kind of framed it as of such, you know,
this is the story of the fall of one of those superpowers
in the Sasanian Persians
and also the continue, well, you know,
the decline of another one, West of Euphrates,
and the story how that power balance
to superpowers ruling Mesopotamia, Syria, area,
that thing that's been there forever
and people expected, you know, would just return to as it had been before,
is completely derailed by the Arab conquest, by the taking of Persia,
by the uniting of both sides of the Euphrates under one calendar.
I think the tricky thing is, if you said 635 in the rise of Islam, people would say medieval.
If you said a rising Arab superpower that fights the Persian Empire and the Roman Empire,
that sounds incredibly ancient.
I think it stretches both, which once again shows how Perth.
medieval, medieval, ancient is, and you can't put a direct date on it.
But the fact is, you know, the spread of Islam so quickly in those armies after that, Egypt,
and then as you mentioned earlier, all the way ultimately to Morocco and southern Spain,
that is clearly medieval.
So if we've conceded Constantine belongs somewhere in the middle,
do we think this probably belongs somewhere in the middle as well?
Yeah, go on then, I think so.
But it's funny, isn't it?
Once again, it shows how you've got someone from the 4th century there,
someone from the 7th century there.
I will always say that Constantine is still ancient,
but I can see the conception of it potentially being there.
But last one is got to do a quick fire.
But this is a bit of a curveball,
but we've been talking about how we've been focusing on Europe and West Asia.
Mesoamerica.
Does ancient medieval crossover,
does it apply to Mesoamerica?
I don't think it can.
I don't think it can either.
It's so tricky because I think if you said Aztecs
and Mayans, people would think you're talking about ancient civilizations?
Oh, I disagree.
I think Aztecs know because they have direct contact with the Spanish.
Aztecs and Inca, I would never, I would hesitate against doing on the Ancians podcast
because I think it's so, you know, it's within 600, 700 years or so, isn't it?
Yeah.
But the others, yes.
I don't know.
But it's tricky then to put a date on when do you medievalize that because you can talk, you know,
late 15th century when Europeans arrived.
but that's suggesting that somehow the Europeans are bringing something new
and brilliant rather than destroying what's already there.
So I think South America, the Americas are one of those places
where it's really, really difficult to periodise history in the same way as we do in Europe.
Because you've done Kohokia, haven't you?
And I must make Kohokia in North America, you know, great earthen mound
and a great city, wasn't it, in North America, you know, is one I would,
I have thought once in a while about doing, but I still think it was too far,
ahead that I hesitated to do it and say it was ancient history.
Yeah. It feels like it should be medieval, but that's us sitting in Europe probably projecting
our ideas across. And, you know, there are places like China, Japan that we could talk about
where they just simply wouldn't recognize the periodization of history that we use in Western Europe.
And I think probably the Americas is the same.
But it's interesting with China and India's other ones.
China is like sometimes they love a big date.
You'll put like the end of the Han dynasty, so third century or the beginning of the Tang.
One of those dynasties that that's the medieval period.
In India, they might say it's the fall of the Guptas.
And then that from on is the time of medieval period.
So it almost feels like there's more clear cut.
Because of that Eurasian landmass, yeah, and there is connection.
I think that it's more easy to put a pinpoint between ancient medieval with India and China,
whereas Mesoamerica, different.
Yeah, yeah.
I think China, the Tang Dynasty in the 7th century starts to feel very, very medieval.
That very quickly moves its way the principles of that to Japan as well.
and they get the Taika reforms in Japan in the kind of mid-seventh century.
And it starts to feel much more like a feudal,
what we might recognize as a medieval society.
But again, it's just tricky to do it everywhere all at once.
Well, that's it.
I will put that as once again,
kind of an undecided one in the middle.
So how do you feel?
The score is the only important thing.
Well, I've got three.
I will claim constant time, but I'm going to put constant time there.
Score.
Fine.
We do a school.
Oh, right.
All right.
Diplomatic end to the,
to the chat. But yeah, that was good fun.
I think it's been really interesting and very, very interesting to actually think about
some people who you might think of as medieval, might have actually lived before people
that you think of as, or events that you think of as ancient.
And just how blurry and porous that border between us is.
So maybe you should stop beating me up in the office.
And we should just be friends.
I know, I know. I'm just too competitive in that regard.
But no, it's been great.
And finally, we've had you on the podcast, my friend.
And, you know, it's always nice to a history hit.
crossover when we can, especially for time period podcasts where it's more difficult to get those
crossovers. But it feels like a nice topic to do, friendly conversation, and lots of room for people
to debate. So let us know your thoughts in the comments, because I'm sure you've got quite a lot.
Matt, it just goes to me to say, thank you so much for taking the time.
It's been an absolute joy. Thank you, Tristan. I hope you enjoyed that as much as I did.
Let me know on social media somewhere if there's another date or person that we could have hung this
transition on or if I should have laid firm a claim to any of the dates and people that we did
discuss. The Ancants has just launched a brand new YouTube channel so you can now watch this
and other great episodes with Tristan. So if you head over there right now, you'll see just how
close to blows we actually came. You can give the video a like and subscribe to the channel
so that we can propel Tristan to the YouTube stardom he deserves. You can find some episodes
with Eleanor and I discussing the periodization of the medieval millennium in the Gomedy.
back catalogue if you'd like more content like this.
And you can subscribe to the ancients wherever you get your podcasts to.
There are new installments of Gone Medieval every Tuesday and Friday,
so please come back to join Eleanor and I for more from the greatest millennium in human history.
Don't forget to also subscribe or follow us on Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts
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I've been Matt Lewis and we've just gone medieval with history hit.
