Constantine the Great
How Power Survived Rome
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ナレーター:
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Christopher Meglin
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著者:
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Tom Hicks
概要
Power does not survive by force alone. It survives by meaning, structure, and habit.
When Constantine rose to power, Rome was collapsing under the weight of its own instability. Emperors came and went through civil war. Authority was temporary. Violence had become the empire's method of succession. Victory solved nothing—because nothing lasted.
Constantine the Great tells the story of the first ruler to break that cycle.
This is not a conventional biography filled with dates and battles. It is a narrative history of how power was redesigned—how Constantine transformed Rome from an empire addicted to civil war into a system capable of endurance.
Through decisive warfare, strategic patience, religious realignment, and institutional reform, Constantine reshaped authority itself:
- Civil war was neutralized as Rome's default political mechanism
- Christianity was transformed from a persecuted faith into a stabilizing force
- Power was relocated, normalized, and embedded into daily life
- Authority became durable rather than performative
This book follows Constantine not just as a conqueror, but as a systems thinker—one who understood that victory without legitimacy collapses, belief without structure fragments, and authority without routine cannot survive succession.
From the chaos of the Tetrarchy to the Battle of the Milvian Bridge, from the founding of Constantinople to the limits Constantine himself could not control, this work explores why his reforms endured long after his death—and why they shaped Western civilization for centuries.
This book is for listeners interested in:
- Roman and Late Antique history
- The rise of Christianity and church–state power
- Political leadership, legitimacy, and statecraft
- How empires collapse—and how some delay it
Constantine did not make Rome eternal.
He made it coherent.
And that changed history.
©2026 Tom Hicks (P)2026 Tom Hicks