Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 1 – The Byzantine
Empire ultimately collapsed because its rulers concentrated all power and
wealth in the capital city of Constantinople, Ivan Baydakov says. Now, the
Russian empire faces a similar risk because its rulers have done the same
things in its capital city, Moscow.
Clear parallels exist, the historian
says, between the hyper-centralization of the Russian state as it emerged after
the collapse of the Soviet Union and hyper-centralization of the Byzantine one,
parallels that should serve as a warning to Russia’s current leaders (newizv.ru/article/general/01-11-2017/ivan-baydakov-istorik-moskva-riskuet-razdelit-uchast-konstantinopolya).
Russian powers
that be often compare the two states, “beginning by suddenly recalling the old
idea of ‘Moscow as the Third Rome’ and ending with the notion that Russia” in
all its various guises “has taken from Byzantium a very great deal: the most
obvious being Orthodoxy as a civilizational doctrine and the historical title
of the ruler.”
But there is another
and more fundamental resemblance. Moscow today is “everything” in Russia: “money,
power, respect, cultural life, the entire life of the state.” Indeed, “everything revolves around Moscow.” A millennium ago, Constantinople was “everything”
for Byzantium: “power, connections, status, money, simply everything.”
There are many
reasons this was the case with Constantinople within Byzantium, Baydakov says.
The emperor lived there, surrounded by an enormous “’army’ of bureaucrats,”
money and trade, and the aristocracy all wanted to be there and so left the
rest of the empire behind.
As a result, he argues, “the
difference in the level of life in the capital from the level of life of the
entire empire was approximately the same as the difference between that in
Moscow and that in Magadan today.”
Because Constantinople grew so large
and needed to be fed and supported, it changed the relationship between capital
cities and the empire. At its insistence, “the entire country worked to support
Constantinople … All the cities of the empire paid taxes ‘to the center,’ but
Constantinople didn’t because it was the center.”
To justify this, Constantinople had
to be “sacralized,” and that very step which showed that the empire existed to
support a single city ultimately condemned it to collapse. “At a certain moment, the Byzantine Empire
lost almost all its territories which had been feeding Constantinople and
couldn’t exist any longer.”
If one considers Russia in the 21st
century, one sees much the same thing, Baydakov argues. “Moscow is accumulating
everything. All power is in Moscow,” and the status of anyone is dependent on
how close it is to that power. Moreover, all money is concentrated there as
well. And together those ensure a better standard of living and higher cultural
life.
“Undoubtedly,” the historian continues,
“a capital city must accumulate in itself power, but not all the resources of the
state. An enormous state must not feed only one city.” Otherwise disaster will
follow. That is what happened in Byzantium; that is what can happen in the
Russian Federation as well.
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