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12 May 2026

BOOK: Laury SARTI, Mediterranean Connections: The Frankish Kingdoms and the Roman Empire (476–756) [The Medieval Mediterranean, 145, eds. Frances ANDREWS, Paul MAGDALINO, Jo Van STEENBERGEN, Larry SIMON, Daniel Lord SMAIL, Corisande FENWICK & Maria G. PARANI] (Leiden/Boston: Brill, 2026), 240 p., ISBN: 978-90-04-74607-7, € 153.7

(image source: Brill)

Abstract:
This monograph challenges the idea that Roman imperial authority in the West ended in 476. It shows how the Frankish realm maintained ties to the empire, with real separation only emerging in the late sixth century. Tracing enduring Frankish-Byzantine diplomacy, shared identities, religious controversy, and trade into the seventh century, it reveals a landscape of continued exchange rather than abrupt decline. Including previously overlooked sources, the study offers a new perspective on Frankish identity, imperial affiliation, and the evolving relationship between Rome, the empire, and the Merovingians from the fifth to the eighth century.
On the author:
Laury Sarti, Ph.D. (2012), University of Hamburg, is Heisenberg Fellow at Heidelberg University.
Table of contents:
1. Introduction
     1.1 Outline and Questions
     1.2 Prior Research
     1.3 Approach and Methods
2. The Empire's Western Territories
     2.1 Odoacer and Theodoric
     2.2 One Empire
     2.3 476 in Retrospective
     2.4 The Empire and the West
     2.5 Results
3. Kings of the Empire
     3.1 Clovis and Theudebert I
     3.2 Romans and Franks in Gaul
     3.3 The Empire's Kingdom
     3.4 Franko-Byzantine Exchanges
     3.5 Factors of Alienation
     3.6 Results
4. Christian Community 
     4.1 The Pope between East and West
     4.2 The Tree Chapters Controversy 
     4.3 The Monothelite Controversy
     4.4 Results
5. Mediterranean Connectivity
     5.1 Diplomatic Exchange in a 'Dark Age'
     5.2 Pilgrimages to the East
     5.3 Travel Routes and Trade
     5.4 Language and Knowledge Exchange
     5.5 Results
6. Conclusions
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