How Empires Die: The Fall of Rome - The Long Goodbye
What if the greatest empire in history didn't fall in a single catastrophic moment but slowly, over centuries?
In How Empires Die: The Fall of Rome The Long Goodbye, Anthony Quinn takes readers on a gripping journey through the final centuries of the Western Roman Empire. Beginning with the death of Marcus Aurelius the last of Rome's "Good Emperors" and ending with the deposition of Romulus Augustulus in 476 CE, this compelling narrative reveals how one of history's most powerful civilizations gradually lost the resilience that once made it unstoppable.
Far more than a tale of barbarian invasions and military defeat, this book uncovers the deeper forces that shaped Rome's decline:
Through vivid storytelling, historical analysis, and accessible prose, Quinn explores how seemingly small decisions, temporary fixes, and neglected weaknesses accumulated over generations until the empire could no longer adapt.
For readers of Tom Holland, Mary Beard, Adrian Goldsworthy, and Edward J. Watts, How Empires Die offers a fascinating examination of Rome's final centuries and timeless lessons about power, resilience, and the hidden vulnerabilities of complex societies.
The fall of Rome was not an event. It was a process. This is the story of that long goodbye.