Skip to main content

Full text of "TheFateofEmpiresbySirJohnGlubb.pdf (PDFy mirror)"

See other formats


THE FATE OF EMPIRES 
and 

SEARCH FOR SURVIVAL 



Sir JohnGlubb 



John Bagot Glubb was born in 1897, his father being a regular officer in the Royal Engineers. 

At the age of four he left England for Mauritius, where his father was posted for a three-year 
tour of duty. At the age of ten he was sent to school for a year in Switzerland. These youthful 
travels may have opened his mind to the outside world at an early age. 

He entered the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich in September 1914, and was 
commissioned in the Royal Engineers in April 1915. He served throughout the first World War 
in France and Belgium, being wounded three times and awarded the Military Cross. In 1920 he 
volunteered for service in Iraq, as a regular officer, but in 1926 resigned his commission and 
accepted an administrative post under the Iraq Government. 

In 1930, however, he signed a contract to serve the Transjordan Government (now Jordan). 
From 1939 to 1956 he commanded the famous Jordan Arab Legion, which was in reality the 
Jordan Army. Since his retirement he has published seventeen books, chiefly on the Middle 
East, and has lectured widely in Britain, the United States and Europe. 



William Blackwood & Sons Ltd 
32 Thistle Street 
Edinburgh EH 1 IHA 
Scotland 

© J. B. G. Ltd, 1976, 1977 



ISBN 0 85158 127 7 

Printed at the Press of the Publisher 



Introduction 



As we pass through hfe, we learn by 
experience. We look back on our behaviour 
when we were young and think how foolish 
we were. In the same way our family, our 
commimity and our town endeavour to avoid 
the mistakes made by our predecessors. 

The experiences of the human race have 
been recorded, in more or less detail, for 
some four thousand years. If we attempt to 
study such a period of time in as many 
countries as possible, we seem to discover 
the same patterns constantly repeated under 
widely differing conditions of climate, 
culture and religion. Surely, we ask 
ourselves, if we studied calmly and 
impartially the history of human institutions 
and development over these four thousand 
years, should we not reach conclusions 
which would assist to solve our problems 
today? For everything that is occurring 
around us has happened again and again 
before. 

No such conception ever appears to have 
entered into the minds of our historians. In 
general, historical teaching in schools is 



limited to this small island. We endlessly 
mull over the Tudors and the Stewarts, the 
Battle of Crecy, and Guy Fawkes. Perhaps 
this narrowness is due to our examination 
system, which necessitates the careful 
definition of a syllabus which all children 
must observe. 

I remember once visiting a school for 
mentally handicapped children. "Our 
children do not have to take examinations," 
the headmaster told me," and so we are able 
to teach them things which will be really 
useful to them in life." 

However this may be, the thesis which I 
wish to propound is that priceless lessons 
could be learned if the history of the past 
four thousand years could be thoroughly and 
impartially studied. In these two articles, 
which first appeared in Blackwood's 
Magazine, I have attempted briefly to sketch 
some of the kinds of lessons which I believe 
we could learn. My plea is that history 
should be the history of the human race, not 
of one small country or period. 



The Fate of Empires 



I Learning from history 

'The only thing we learn from history,' it 
has been said, 'is that men never learn from 
history', a sweeping generalisation perhaps, 
but one which the chaos in the world today 
goes far to confirm. What then can be the 
reason why, in a society which claims to 
probe every problem, the bases of history are 
still so completely unknown? 

Several reasons for the futility of our 
historical studies may be suggested. 

First, our historical work is limited to short 
periods— the history of our own country, or 
that of some past age which, for some 
reason, we hold in respect. 

Second, even within these short periods, 
the slant we give to our narrative is governed 
by our own vanity rather than by objectivity. 
If we are considering the history of our own 
country, we write at length of the periods 
when our ancestors were prosperous and 
victorious, but we pass quickly over their 
shortcomings or their defeats. Our people 
are represented as patriotic heroes, their 
enemies as grasping imperialists, or 
subversive rebels. In other words, our 
national histories are propaganda, not well- 
balanced investigations. 

Third, in the sphere of world history, we 
study certain short, usually unconnected, 
periods, which fashion at certain epochs has 
made popular. Greece 500 years before 
Christ, and the Roman Republic and early 
Roman Empire are cases in point. The 



intervals between the 'great periods' are 
neglected. Recently Greece and Rome have 
become largely discredited, and history tends 
to become increasingly the parochial history 
of our own countries. 

To derive any useful instruction from 
history, it seems to me essential first of all to 
grasp the principle that history, to be 
meaningful, must be the history of the 
himian race. For history is a continuous 
process, gradually developing, changing and 
turning back, but in general moving forward 
in a single mighty stream. Any useful lessons 
to be derived must be learned by the study of 
the whole flow of human development, not 
by the selection of short periods here and 
there in one country or another. 

Every age and culture is derived from its 
predecessors, adds some contribution of its 
own, and passes it on to its successors. If we 
boycott various periods of history, the 
origins of the new cultures which succeeded 
them cannot be explained. 



Sir John Ghibb, better known as Glubb 
Pasha, was bom in 1897, and served in 
France in the First World War from 1915 to 
1918. In 1926 he left the regular army to 
serve the Iraq Government. From 1939 to 
1956, he commanded the famous Jordan 
Arab Legion. Since retirement, he has 
published sixteen books, chiefly on the 
Middle East, and has lectured widely. 



2 



The Fate of Empires 



Physical science has expanded its knowledge 
by building on the work of its predecessors, 
and by making millions of careful experi- 
ments, the results of which are meticulously 
recorded. Such methods have not yet been 
employed in the study of world history. Our 
piecemeal historical work is still mainly 
dominated by emotion and prejudice. 

II The lives of empires 

If we desire to ascertain the laws which 
govern the rise and fall of empires, the 
obvious course is to investigate the imperial 
experiments recorded in history, and to 



The nation 
Assyria 
Persia 

(Cyrus and his descendants) 
Greece 

(Alexander and his successors) 
Roman Republic 
Roman Empire 
Arab Empire 
Mameluke Empire 
Ottoman Empire 
Spain 

Romanov Russia 
Britain 

This list calls for certain comments. 
(1) The present writer is exploring the facts, 
not trying to prove anything. The dates given 
are largely arbitrary. Empires do not usually 
begin or end on a certain date. There is 



endeavour to deduce from them any lessons 
which seem to be applicable to them all. 

The word 'empire', by association with the 
British Empire, is visualised by some people 
as an organisation consisting of a home- 
country in Europe and 'colonies' in other 
continents. In this essay, the term 'empire' is 
used to signify a great power, often called 
today a superpower. Most of the empires in 
history have been large landblocks, almost 
without overseas possessions. 

We possess a considerable amount of 
information on many empires recorded in 
history, and of their vicissitudes and the 
lengths of their lives, for example: 



Duration in years 
247 
208 

231 

233 
207 
246 
267 
250 
250 
234 
250 

normally a gradual period of expansion and 
then a period of decline. The resemblance in 
the duration of these great powers may be 
queried. Human affairs are subject to many 
chances, and it is not to be expected that they 



Dates of rise and fall 
859-612 B.C. 
538-330 B.C. 

331-100 B.C. 

260-27 B.C. 
27 B.C.-A.D. 180 
A.D. 634-880 
1250-1517 
1320-1570 
1500-1750 
1682-1916 
1700-1950 



The Fate of Empires 



3 



could be calculated with mathematical 

accuracy. 

(2) Nevertheless, it is suggested that there is 
sufficient resemblance between the life 
periods of these different empires to justify 
further study. 

(3) The division of Rome into two periods 
may be thought unwarranted. The first, or 
republican, period dates from the time when 
Rome became the mistress of Italy, and ends 
with the accession of Augustus. The imperial 
period extends from the accession of 
Augustus to the death of Marcus Aurelius. It 
is true that the empire survived nominally 
for more than a century after this date, but it 
did so in constant confusion, rebellions, civil 
wars and barbarian invasions. 

(4) Not all empires endured for their full life- 
span. The Babylonian Empire of Nebucha- 
dnezzar, for example, was overthrown by 
Cyrus, after a life duration of only some 
seventy-four years. 

(5) An interesting deduction from the figures 
seems to be that the duration of empires 
does not depend on the speed of travel or the 
nature of weapons. The Assyrians marched 
on foot and fought with spears and bow and 
arrows. The British used artillery, railways 
and ocean-going ships. Yet the two empires 
lasted for approximately the same periods. 

There is a tendency nowadays to say that 
this is the jet-age, and consequently there is 
nothing for us to learn from past empires. 
Such an attitude seems to be erroneous. 

(6) It is tempting to compare the lives of 
empires with those of human beings. We 
may choose a figure and say that the average 
life of a human being is seventy years. Not all 
human beings live exactly seventy years. 
Some die in infancy, others are killed in 
accidents in middle life, some survive to the 



age of eighty or ninety. Nevertheless, in spite 
of such exceptions, we are justified in saying 
that seventy years is a fair estimate of the 
average person's expectation of life. 
(7) We may perhaps at this stage be allowed 
to draw certain conclusions: 

(a) In spite of the accidents of fortune, and 
the apparent circumstances of the human 
race at different epochs, the periods of 
duration of different empires at varied 
epochs show a remarkable similarity. 

(b) Immense changes in the technology of 
transport or in methods of warfare do not 
seem to affect the life-expectation of an 
empire. 

(c) The changes in the technology of trans- 
port and of war have, however, affected the 
shape of empires. The Assyrians, marching 
on foot, could only conquer their neigh- 
bours, who were accessible by land— the 
Medes, the Babylonians, the Persians and 
the Egyptians. 

The British, making use of ocean-going 
ships, conquered many countries and sub- 
continents, which were accessible to them 
by water— North America, India, South 
Africa, Australia and New Zealand— but 
they never succeeded in conquering their 
neighbours, France, Germany and Spain. 

But, although the shapes of the Assjoian 
and the British Empires were entirely 
different, both lasted about the same 
length of time. 

Ill The human yardstick 

What then, we may ask, can have been the 
factor which caused such an extraordinary 
similarity in the duration of empires, under 
such diverse conditions, and such utterly 
different technological achievements? 



4 



The Fate of Empires 



One of the very few units of measurement 
which have not seriously changed since the 
Assyrians is the human 'generation', a period 
of about twenty-five years. Thus a period of 
250 years would represent about ten gene- 
rations of people. A closer examination of the 
characteristics of the rise and fall of great 
nations may emphasise the possible signifi- 
cance of the sequence of generations. 

Let us then attempt to examine the stages 
in the lives of such powerful nations. 

IV Stage one. The outburst 

Again and again in history we find a small 
nation, treated as insignificant by its 
contemporaries, suddenly emerging from its 
homeland and overrunning large areas of the 
world. Prior to Philip (359-336 B.C.), Mace- 
don had been an insignificant state to the 
north of Greece. Persia was the great power 
of the time, completely dominating the area 
from Eastern Europe to India. Yet by 323 
B.C., thirty-six years after the accession of 
Philip, the Persian Empire had ceased to 
exist, and the Macedonian Empire extended 
from the Danube to India, including Egypt. 

This amazing expansion may perhaps he 
attributed to the genius of Alexander the 
Great, but this cannot have been the sole 
reason; for although after his death every- 
thing went wrong— the Macedonian generals 
fought one another and established rival 
empires— Macedonian pre-eminence survi- 
ved for 231 years. 

In the year A.D. 600, the world was divided 
between two superpower groups as it has 
been for the past fifty years between Soviet 
Russia and the West. The two powers were 
the eastern Roman Empire and the Persian 
Empire. The Arabs were then the despised 
and backward inhabitants of the Arabian 



Peninsula. They consisted chiefly of wan- 
dering tribes, and had no government, no 
constitution and no army. Syria, Palestine, 
Egypt and North Africa were Roman 
provinces, Iraq was part of Persia. 

The Prophet Mohammed preached in 
Arabia from A.D. 613 to 632, when he died. 
In 633, the Arabs burst out of their desert 
peninsula, and simultaneously attacked the 
two super-powers. Within twenty years, the 
Persian Empire had ceased to exist. Seventy 
years after the death of the Prophet, the 
Arabs had established an empire extending 
from the Atlantic to the plains of Northern 
India and the frontiers of China. 

At the beginning of the thirteenth century, 
the Mongols were a group of savage tribes in 
the steppes of Mongolia. In 1211, Genghis 
Khan invaded China. By 1253, the Mongols 
had established an empire extending from 
Asia Minor to the China Sea, one of the 
largest empires the world has ever known. 

The Arabs ruled the greater part of Spain 
for 780 years, from 712 A.D. to 1492. (780 
years back in British history would take us to 
1196 and King Richard Coeur de Lion.) 
During these eight centuries, there had been 
no Spanish nation, the petty kings of Aragon 
and Castile alone holding on in the 
mountains. 

The agreement between Ferdinand and 
Isabella and Christopher Columbus was 
signed immediately after the fall of Granada, 
the last Arab kingdom in Spain, in 1492. 
Within fifty years, Cortez had conquered 
Mexico, and Spain was the world's greatest 
empire. 

Examples of the sudden outbursts by 
which empires are born could be multiplied 
indefinitely. These random illustrations must 
suffice. 



The Fate of Empires 



5 



V Characteristics of the outburst 

These sudden outbursts are usually 
characterised by an extraordinary display of 
energy and courage. The new conquerors are 
normally poor, hardy and enterprising and 
above all aggressive. The decaying empires 
which they overthrow are wealthy but 
defensive-minded. In the time of Roman 
greatness, the legions used to dig a ditch 
round their camps at night to avoid surprise. 
But the ditches were mere earthworks, and 
between them wide spaces were left through 
which the Romans could counter-attack. But 
as Rome grew older, the earthworks became 
high walls, through which access was given 
only by narrow gates. Counterattacks were 
no longer possible. The legions were now 
passive defenders. 

But the new nation is not only distingui- 
shed by victory in battle, but by unresting 
enterprise in every field. Men hack their way 
through jungles, climb mountains, or brave 
the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans in tiny 
cockle-shells. The Arabs crossed the Straits 
of Gibraltar in A.D. 711 with 12,000 men, 
defeated a Gothic army of more than twice 
their strength, marched straight over 250 
miles of unknown enemy territory and seized 
the Gothic capital of Toledo. At the same 
stage in British history. Captain Cook disco- 
vered Australia. Fearless initiative characte- 
rises such periods. 

Other peculiarities of the period of the 
conquering pioneers are their readiness to 
improvise and experiment. Untrammelled by 
traditions, they will turn anything available 
to their purpose. If one method fails, they try 
something else. Uninhibited by textbooks or 
book learning, action is their solution to 
every problem. 



Poor, hardy, often half-starved and ill-clad, 
they abound in courage, energy and 
initiative, overcome every obstacle and 
always seem to be in control of the situation. 

VI The causes of race outbursts 

The modern instinct is to seek a reason for 
everything, and to doubt the veracity of a 
statement for which a reason cannot be 
found. So many examples can be given of the 
sudden eruption of an obscure race into a 
nation of conquerors that the truth of the 
phenomenon cannot be held to be doubtful. 
To assign a cause is more difficult. Perhaps 
the easiest explanation is to assume that the 
poor and obscure race is tempted by the 
wealth of the ancient civilisation, and there 
would undoubtedly appear to be an element 
of greed for loot in barbarian invasions. 

Such a motivation may be divided into two 
classes. The first is mere loot, plunder and 
rape, as, for example, in the case of Attila 
and the Huns, who ravaged a great part of 
Europe from A.D. 450 to 453. However, when 
Attila died in the latter year, his empire fell 
apart and his tribes returned to Eastern 
Europe. 

Many of the barbarians who founded 
dynasties in Western Europe on the ruins of 
the Roman Empire, however, did so out of 
admiration for Roman civilisation, and 
themselves aspired to become Romans. 

VII A providential turnover? 
Whatever causes may be given for the 

overthrow of great civilisations by 
barbarians, we can sense certain resulting 
benefits. Every race on earth has distinctive 
characteristics. Some have been distingui- 
shed in philosophy, some in administration, 
some in romance, poetry or religion, some in 



6 



The Fate of Empires 



their legal system. During the pre-eminence 
of each culture, its distinctive characteristics 
are carried by it far and wide across the 
world. 

If the same nation were to retain its 
domination indefinitely, its peculiar qualities 
would permanently characterise the whole 
human race. Under the system of empires 
each lasting for 250 years, the sovereign race 
has time to spread its particular virtues far 
and wide. Then, however, another people, 
with entirely different peculiarities, takes its 
place, and its virtues and accomplishments 
are likewise disseminated. By this system, 
each of the innumerable races of the world 
enjoys a period of greatness, during which its 
peculiar qualities are placed at the service of 
mankind. 

To those who believe in the existence of 
God, as the Ruler and Director of human 
affairs, such a system may appear as a 
manifestation of divine wisdom, tending 
towards the slow and ultimate perfection of 
humanity. 

VIII The course of empire 

The first stage of the life of a great nation, 
therefore, after its outburst, is a period of 
amazing initiative, and almost incredible 
enterprise, courage and hardihood. These 
qualities, often in a very short time, produce 
a new and formidable nation. These early 
victories, however, are won chiefly by 
reckless bravery and daring initiative. 

The ancient civilisation thus attacked will 
have defended itself by its sophisticated 
weapons, and by its military organisation 
and discipline. The barbarians quickly 
appreciate the advantages of these military 
methods and adopt them. As a result, the 
second stage of expansion of the new empire 



consists of more organised, disciplined and 
professional campaigns. 

In other fields, the daring initiative of the 
original conquerors is maintained— in 
geographical exploration, for example: 
pioneering new countries, penetrating new 
forests, cUmbing unexplored mountains, and 
sailing uncharted seas. The new nation is 
confident, optimistic and perhaps contemp- 
tuous of the 'decadent' races which it has 
subjugated. 

The methods employed tend to be practical 
and experimental, both in government and 
in warfare, for they are not tied by centuries 
of tradition, as happens in ancient empires. 
Moreover, the leaders are free to use their 
own improvisations, not having studied 
politics or tactics in schools or in textbooks. 

IX U.SA. in the stage of the pioneers 

In the case of the United States of America, 
the pioneering period did not consist of a 
barbarian conquest of an effete civilisation, 
but of the conquest of barbarian peoples. 
Thus, viewed from the outside, every 
example seems to be different. But viewed 
from the standpoint of the great nation, 
every example seems to be similar. 

The United States arose suddenly as a new 
nation, and its period of pioneering was 
spent in the conquest of a vast continent, not 
an ancient empire. Yet the subsequent life 
history of the United States has followed the 
standard pattern which we shall attempt to 
trace— the periods of the pioneers, of 
commerce, of affluence, of intellectualism 
and of decadence. 

X Commercial expansion 

The conquest of vast areas of land and 
their subjection to one government 



The Fate of Empires 



7 



automatically acts as a stimulant to com- 
merce. Both merchants and goods can be 
exchanged over considerable distances. 
Moreover, if the empire be an extensive one, 
it will include a great variety of climates, 
producing extremely varied products, which 
the different areas will wish to exchange with 
one another. 

The speed of modem methods of trans- 
portation tends to create in us the impress- 
sion that far-flung commerce is a modem 
development, but this is not the case. Objects 
made in Ireland, Scandinavia and China 
have been found in the graves or the rains of 
the Middle East, dating from 1,000 years 
before Christ. The means of transport were 
slower, but, when a great empire was in 
control, commerce was freed from the 
innumerable shackles imposed upon it today 
by passports, import permits, customs, 
boycotts and political interference. 

The Roman Empire extended from Britain 
to Syria and Egypt, a distance, in a direct 
line, of perhaps 2,700 miles. A Roman 
official, transferred from Britain to SjTia, 
might spend six months on the joumey. Yet, 
throughout the whole distance, he would be 
travelling in the same country, with the same 
official language, the same laws, the same 
currency and the same administrative 
system. Today, some twenty independent 
countries separate Britain from Sjria, each 
with its own govemment, its own laws, 
politics, customs fees, passports and 
currencies, making commercial co-operation 
almost impossible. And this process of 
disintegration is still continuing. Even within 
the small areas of the modem European 
nations, provincial movements demanding 
secession or devolution tend further to 
splinter the continent. 



The present fashion for 'independence' has 
produced great numbers of tiny states in the 
world, some of them consisting of only one 
city or of a small island. This system is an 
insuperable obstacle to trade and co- 
operation. The present European Economic 
Community is an attempt to secure commer- 
cial cooperation among small independent 
states over a large area, but the plan meets 
with many difficulties, due to the mutual 
jealousies of so many nations. 

Even savage and militaristic empires 
promoted commerce, whether or not they 
intended to do so. The Mongols were some of 
the most bratal military conquerors in 
history, massacring the entire populations of 
cities. Yet, in the thirteenth century, when 
their empire extended from Peking to 
Hungary, the caravan trade between China 
and Europe achieved a remarkable degree of 
prosperity— the whole joumey was in the 
territory of one government. 

In the eighth and ninth centuries, the 
caliphs of Baghdad achieved fabulous wealth 
owing to the immense extent of their 
territories, which constituted a single trade 
bloc. The empire of the caliphs is now 
divided into some twenty-five separate 
'nations'. 

XI The pros and cons of empires 

In discussing the life-story of the typical 
empire, we have digressed into a discussion 
of whether empires are useful or injurious to 
mankind. We seem to have discovered that 
empires have certain advantages, particu- 
larly in the field of commerce, and in the 
establishment of peace and security in vast 
areas of the globe. Perhaps we should also 
include the spread of varied cultures to many 
races. The present infatuation for indepen- 



8 



The Fate of Empires 



dence for ever smaller and smaller units will 
eventually doubtless be succeeded by new 
international empires. 

The present attempts to create a European 
community may be regarded as a practical 
endeavour to constitute a new super-power, 
in spite of the fragmentation resulting from 
the craze for independence. If it succeeds, 
some of the local independencies will have to 
be sacrificed. If it fails, the same result may 
be attained by military conquest, or by the 
partition of Europe between rival super- 
powers. The inescapable conclusion seems, 
however, to be that larger territorial units are 
a benefit to commerce and to public stability, 
whether the broader territory be achieved by 
voluntary association or by military action. 

XII Sea power 

One of the more benevolent ways in which 
a super-power can promote both peace and 
commerce is by its command of the sea. 

From Waterloo to 1914, the British Navy 
commanded the seas of the world. Britain 
grew rich, but she also made the Seas safe for 
the commerce of all nations, and prevented 
major wars for 100 years. 

Curiously enough, the question of sea 
power was never clearly distinguished, in 
British politics during the last fifty years, 
from the question of imperial rule over other 
countries. In fact, the two subjects are 
entirely distinct. Sea power does not offend 
small countries, as does military occupation. 
If Britain had maintained her navy, with a 
few naval bases overseas in isolated islands, 
and had given independence to colonies 
which asked for it, the world might well be a 
more stable place today. In fact, however, the 
navy was swept away in the popular outcry 
against imperialism. 



XIII The Age of Commerce 

Let us now, however, return to the life- 
story of our tj^ical empire. We have already 
considered the age of outburst, when a little- 
regarded people suddenly bursts on to the 
world stage with a wild courage and energy. 
Let us call it the Age of the Pioneers. 

Then we saw that these new conquerors 
acquired the sophisticated weapons of the 
old empires, and adopted their regular 
systems of military organisation and 
training. A great period of military expansion 
ensued, which we may call the Age of 
Conquests. The conquests resulted in the 
acquisition of vast territories under one 
government, thereby automatically giving 
rise to commercial prosperity. We may call 
this the Age of Commerce. 

The Age of Conquests, of course, overlaps 
the Age of Commerce. The proud military 
traditions still hold sway and the great 
armies guard the frontiers, but gradually the 
desire to make money seems to gain hold of 
the public. During the military period, glory 
and honour were the principal objects of 
ambition. To the merchant, such ideas are 
but empty words, which add nothing to the 
bank balance. 

XIV Art and luxury 

The wealth which seems, almost without 
effort, to pour into the country enables the 
commercial classes to grow immensely rich. 
How to spend all this money becomes a 
problem to the wealthy business community. 
Art, architecture and luxury find rich 
patrons. Splendid municipal buildings and 
wide streets lend dignity and beauty to the 
wealthy areas of great cities. The rich 
merchants build themselves palaces, and 
money is invested in communications. 



The Fate of Empires 



9 



highways, bridges, railways or hotels, 
according to the varied patterns of the ages. 

The first half of the Age of Commerce 
appears to be peculiarly splendid. The 
ancient virtues of courage, patriotism and 
devotion to duty are still in evidence. The 
nation is proud, united and full of self- 
confidence. Boys are still required, first of all, 
to be manly— to ride, to shoot straight and to 
tell the truth. (It is remarkable what 
emphasis is placed, at this stage, on the 
manly virtue of truthfulness, for lying is 
cowardice— the fear of facing up to the 
situation.) 

Boys' schools are intentionally rough. Fru- 
gal eating, hard living, breaking the ice to 
have a bath and similar customs are aimed at 
producing a strong, hardy and fearless breed 
of men. Duty is the word constantly drum- 
med into the heads of young people. 

The Age of Commerce is also marked by 
great enterprise in the exploration for new 
forms of wealth. Daring initiative is shown in 
the search for profitable enterprises in far 
comers of the earth, perpetuating to some 
degree the adventurous courage of the Age of 
Conquests. 

XV The Age of Affluence 

There does not appear to be any doubt that 
money is the agent which causes the decline 
of this strong, brave and self-confident 
people. The decline in courage, enterprise 
and a sense of duty is, however, gradual. 

The first direction in which wealth injures 
the nation is a moral one. Money replaces 
honour and adventure as the objective of the 
best young men. Moreover, men do not 
normally seek to make money for their 
country or their community, but for them- 
selves. Gradually, and almost imperceptibly. 



the Age of Affluence silences the voice of 
duty. The object of the young and the 
ambitious is no longer fame, honour or 
service, but cash. 

Education undergoes the same gradual 
transformation. No longer do schools aim at 
producing brave patriots ready to serve their 
country. Parents and students alike seek the 
educational qualifications which will 
command the highest salaries. The Arab 
moralist, Ghazali (1058-1111), complains in 
these very same words of the lowering of 
objectives in the declining Arab world of his 
time. Students, he says, no longer attend 
college to acquire learning and virtue, but to 
obtain those qualifications which will enable 
them to grow rich. The same situation is 
everywhere evident among us in the West 
today. 

XVI High Noon 

That which we may call the High Noon of 
the nation covers the period of transition 
from the Age of Conquests to the Age of 
Affluence: the age of Augustus in Rome, that 
of Harun al-Rashid in Baghdad, of Sulaiman 
the Magnificent in the Ottoman Empire, or 
of Queen Victoria in Britain. Perhaps we 
might add the age of Woodrow Wilson in the 
United States. 

All these periods reveal the same 
characteristics. The immense wealth accu- 
mulated in the nation dazzles the onlookers. 
Enough of the ancient virtues of courage, 
energy and patriotism survive to enable the 
state successfully to defend its frontiers. But, 
beneath the surface, greed for money is 
gradually replacing duty and public service. 
Indeed the change might be summarised as 
being from service to selfishness. 



10 



The Fate of Empires 



XVII Defensiveness 

Another outward change which invariably 
marks the transition from the Age of 
Conquests to the Age of Affluence is the 
spread of defensiveness. The nation, immen- 
sely rich, is no longer interested in glory or 
duty, but is only anxious to retain its wealth 
and its luxury. It is a period of defensiveness, 
from the Great Wall of China, to Hadrian's 
Wall on the Scottish Border, to the Maginot 
Line in France in 1939. 

Money being in better supply than courage, 
subsidies instead of weapons are employed 
to buy off enemies. To justify this departure 
from ancient tradition, the human mind 
easily devises its own justification. Military 
readiness, or aggressiveness, is denounced as 
primitive and immoral. Civilised peoples are 
too proud to fight. The conquest of one 
nation by another is declared to be immoral. 
Empires are wicked. This intellectual device 
enables us to suppress our feeling of 
inferiority, when we read of the heroism of 
our ancestors, and then ruefully contemplate 
our position today. 'It is not that we are 
afraid to fight,' we say, 'but we should 
consider it immoral.' This even enables us to 
assume an attitude of moral superiority. 

The weakness of pacifism is that there are 
still many peoples in the world who are 
aggressive. Nations who proclaim themselves 
unwilling to fight are liable to be conquered 
by peoples in the stage of militarism— 
perhaps even to see themselves incorporated 
into some new empire, with the status of 
mere provinces or colonies. 

When to be prepared to use force and when 
to give way is a perpetual human problem, 
which can only be solved, as best we can, in 
each successive situation as it arises. In fact, 
however, history seems to indicate that great 



nations do not normally disarm from 
motives of conscience, but owing to the 
weakening of a sense of duty in the citizens, 
and the increase in selfishness and the desire 
for wealth and ease. 

XVIII The Age of Intellect 

We have now, perhaps arbitrarily, divided 
the life-story of our great nation into four 
ages. The Age of the Pioneers (or the 
Outburst), the Age of Conquests, the Age of 
Commerce, and the Age of Affluence. The 
great wealth of the nation is no longer 
needed to supply the mere necessities, or 
even the luxuries of life. Ample funds are 
available also for the pursuit of knowledge. 

The merchant princes of the Age of 
Commerce seek fame and praise, not only by 
endowing works of art or patronising music 
and literature. They also found and endow 
colleges and universities. It is remarkable 
with what regularity this phase follows on 
that of wealth, in empire after empire, 
divided by many centuries. 

In the eleventh century, the former Arab 
Empire, then in complete political decline, 
was ruled by the Seljuk sultan, Malik Shah. 
The Arabs, no longer soldiers, were still the 
intellectual leaders of the world. During the 
reign of Malik Shah, the building of 
universities and colleges became a passion. 
Whereas a small number of universities in 
the great cities had sufficed the years of Arab 
glory, now a university sprang up in every 
town. 

In our own lifetime, we have witnessed the 
same phenomenon in the U.S.A. and Britain. 
When these nations were at the height of 

their glory. Harvard, Yale, Oxford and 
Cambridge seemed to meet their needs. Now 
almost every city has its university. 



The Fate of Empires 



11 



The ambition of the young, once engaged 
in the pursuit of adventure and mihtary 
glory, and then in the desire for the 
accumulation of wealth, now turns to the 
acquisition of academic honours. 

It is useful here to take note that almost all 
the pursuits followed with such passion 
throughout the ages were in themselves 
good. The manly cult of hardihood, frank- 
ness and truthfulness, which characterised 
the Age of Conquests, produced many really 
splendid heroes. 

The opening up of natural resources, and 
the peaceful accumulation of wealth, which 
marked the age of commerciaUsm, appeared 
to introduce new triumphs in civilisation, in 
culture and in the arts. In the same way, the 
vast expansion of the field of knowledge 
achieved by the Age of Intellect seemed to 
mark a new high-water mark of human 
progress. We cannot say that any of these 
changes were 'good' or "bad'. 

The striking features in the pageant of 
empire are: 

(a) the extraordinary exactitude with which 
these stages have followed one another, in 
empire after empire, over centuries or even 
millennia; and 

(b) the fact that the successive changes 
seem to represent mere changes in popular 
fashion— new fads and fancies which sweep 
away public opinion without logical reason. 
At first, popular enthusiasm is devoted to 
military glory, then to the accumulation of 
wealth and later to the acquisition of 
academic fame. 

Why could not all these legitimate, and 
indeed beneficent, activities be carried on 
simultaneously, each of them in due modera- 
tion? Yet this never seemed to happen. 



XIX The effects ofintellectualism 

There are so many things in human life 
which are not dreamt of in our popular 
philosophy. The spread of knowledge seems 
to be the most beneficial of human activities, 
and yet every period of decline is character- 
rised by this expansion of intellectual 
activity. 'All the Athenians and strangers 
which were there spent their time in nothing 
else, but either to tell or to hear some new 
thing' is the description given in the Acts of 
the Apostles of the decline of Greek 
intellectuaUsm. 

The Age of Intellect is accompanied by 
surprising advances in natural science. In the 
ninth century, for example, in the age of 
Mamun, the Arabs measured the circum- 
ference of the earth with remarkable 
accuracy. Seven centuries were to pass 
before Western Europe discovered that the 
world was not flat. Less than fifty years after 
the amazing scientific discoveries under 
Mamun, the Arab Empire collapsed. Won- 
derful and beneficent as was the progress of 
science, it did not save the empire from 
chaos. 

The full flowering of Arab and Persian 
intellectuaUsm did not occur until after their 
imperial and political collapse. Thereafter 
the intellectuals attained fresh triumphs in 
the academic field, but politically they 
became the abject servants of the often 
illiterate rulers. When the Mongols conqu- 
ered Persia in the thirteenth century, they 
were themselves entirely uneducated and 
were obHged to depend wholly on native 
Persian officials to administer the country 
and to collect the revenue. They retained as 
wazeer, or Prime Minister, one Rashid al- 
Din, a historian of international repute. Yet 



12 



The Fate of Empires 



the Prime Minister, when speaking to the 
Mongol II Khan, was obhged to remain 
throughout the interview on his knees. At 
state banquets, the Prime Minister stood 
behind the Khan's seat to wait upon him. If 
the Khan were in a good mood, he 
occasionally passed his wazeer a piece of 
food over his shoulder. 

As in the case of the Athenians, 
intellectualism leads to discussion, debate 
and argument, such as is typical of the 
Western nations today. Debates in elected 
assemblies or local committees, in articles in 
the Press or in interviews on television- 
endless and incessant talking. 

Men are interminably different, and 
intellectual arguments rarely lead to 
agreement. Thus public affairs drift from bad 
to worse, amid an unceasing cacophony of 
argument. But this constant dedication to 
discussion seems to destroy the power of 
action. Amid a Babel of talk, the ship drifts 
on to the rocks. 

XX The inadequacy of intellect 

Perhaps the most dangerous by-product of 
the Age of Intellect is the unconscious 
growth of the idea that the human brain can 
solve the problems of the world. Even on the 
low level of practical affairs this is patently 
untrue. Any small human activity, the local 
bowls club or the ladies' luncheon club, 
requires for its survival a measure of self- 
sacrifice and service on the part of the 
members. In a vdder national sphere, the 
survival of the nation depends basically on 
the loyalty and self-sacrifice of the citizens. 
The impression that the situation can be 
saved by mental cleverness, without unsel- 
fishness or human self-dedication, can only 
lead to collapse. 



Thus we see that the cultivation of the 
human intellect seems to be a magnificent 
ideal, but only on condition that it does not 
weaken unselfishness and human dedication 
to service. Yet this, judging by historical 
precedent, seems to be exactly what it does 
do. Perhaps it is not the intellectualism 
which destroys the spirit of self-sacrifice— the 
least we can say is that the two, 
intellectualism and the loss of a sense of 
duty, appear simultaneously in the life-story 
of the nation. 

Indeed it often appears in individuals, that 
the head and the heart are natural rivals. The 
brilliant but cynical intellectual appears at 
the opposite end of the spectrum from the 
emotional self-sacrifice of the hero or the 
martyr. Yet there are times when the perhaps 
unsophisticated self-dedication of the hero is 
more essential than the sarcasms of the 
clever. 

XXI Civil dissensions 

Another remarkable and unexpected 
symptom of national decline is the intensi- 
fication of internal political hatreds. One 
would have expected that, when the survival 
of the nation became precarious, political 
factions would drop their rivalry and stand 
shoulder-to-shoulder to save their country. 

In the fourteenth century, the weakening 
empire of Byzantium was threatened, and 
indeed dominated, by the Ottoman Turks. 
The situation was so serious that one would 
have expected every subject of Bj^antium to 
abandon his personal interests and to stand 
with his compatriots in a last desperate 
attempt to save the country. The reverse 
occurred. The Byzantines spent the last fifty 
years of their history in fighting one another 
in repeated civil wars, until the Ottomans 



The Fate of Empires 



13 



moved in and administered the coup de 
grace. 

Britain has been governed by an elected 
pariiament for many centuries. In former 
years, however, the rival parties observed 
many unwritten laws. Neither party wished 
to eliminate the other. All the members 
referred to one another as honourable 
gentlemen. But such courtesies have now 
lapsed. Booing, shouting and loud noises 
have undermined the dignity of the House, 
and angry exchanges are more frequent. We 
are fortunate if these rivalries are fought out 
in ParUament, but sometimes such hatreds 
are carried into the streets, or into industry 
in the form of strikes, demonstrations, 
boycotts and similar activities. True to the 
normal course followed by nations in 
decline, internal differences are not 
reconciled in an attempt to save the nation. 
On the contrary, internal rivalries become 
more acute, as the nation becomes weaker. 

XXII The influx of foreigners 

One of the oft-repeated phenomena of 
great empires is the influx of foreigners to 
the capital city. Roman historians often 
complain of the number of Asians and 
Africans in Rome. Baghdad, in its prime in 
the ninth century, was international in its 
population— Persians, Turks, Arabs, Arme- 
nians, Egyptians, Africans and Greeks 
mingled in its streets. 

In London today, Cypriots, Greeks, 
Italians, Russians, Africans, Germans and 
Indians jostle one another on the buses and 
in the underground, so that it sometimes 
seems difficult to find any British. The same 
applies to New York, perhaps even more so. 
This problem does not consist in any 
inferiority of one race as compared with 



another, but simply in the differences 
between them. 

In the age of the first outburst and the 
subsequent Age of Conquests, the race is 
normally ethnically more or less 
homogeneous. This state of affairs facilitates 
a feeUng of soUdarity and comradeship. But 
in the Ages of Commerce and Affluence, 
every type of foreigner floods into the great 
city, the streets of which are reputed to be 
paved with gold. As, in most cases, this great 
city is also the capital of the empire, the 
cosmopolitan crowd at the seat of empire 
exercises a political influence greatly in 
excess of its relative numbers. 

Second- or third-generation foreign 
immigrants may appear outwardly to be 
entirely assimilated, but they often constitute 
a weakness in two directions. First, their 
basic human nature often differs from that of 
the original imperial stock. If the earlier 
imperial race was stubborn and slow- 
moving, the immigrants might come from 
more emotional races, thereby introducing 
cracks and schisms into the national policies, 
even if all were equally loyal. 

Second, while the nation is still affluent, all 
the diverse races may appear equally loyal. 
But in an acute emergency, the immigrants 
will often be less willing to sacrifice their 
lives and their property than will be the 
original descendants of the founder race. 

Third, the immigrants are liable to form 
communities of their own, protecting 
primarily their own interests, and only in the 
second degree that of the nation as a whole. 

Fourth, many of the foreign immigrants 
will probably belong to races originally 
conquered by and absorbed into the empire. 
While the empire is enjoying its High Noon 
of prosperity, all these people are proud and 



14 



The Fate of Empires 



glad to be imperial citizens. But when decline 
sets in, it is extraordinary how the memory 
of ancient wars, perhaps centuries before, is 
suddenly revived, and local or provincial 
movements appear demanding secession or 
independence. Some day this phenomenon 
will doubtless appear in the now apparently 
monolithic and authoritarian Soviet empire. 
It is amazing for how long such provincial 
sentiments can survive. 

Historical examples of this phenomenon 
are scarcely needed. The idle and captious 
Roman mob, with its endless appetite for 
free distributions of food— bread and 
games— is notorious, and utterly different 
from that stem Roman spirit which we 
associate with the wars of the early republic. 

In Baghdad, in the golden days of Harun 
al-Rashid, Arabs were a minority in the 
imperial capital. Istanbul, in the great days 
of Ottoman rule, was peopled by inhabitants 
remarkably few of whom were descendants 
of Turkish conquerors. In New York, 
descendants of the Pilgrim Fathers are few 
and far between. 

This interesting phenomenon is largely 
limited to great cities. The original conqu- 
ering race is often to be found in relative 
purity in rural districts and on far frontiers. 
It is the wealth of the great cities which 
draws the immigrants. As, with the grov^rth of 
industry, cities nowadays achieve an ever 
greater preponderance over the countryside, 
so will the influence of foreigners increa- 
singly dominate old empires. 

Once more it may be emphasised that I do 
not wish to convey the impression that 
immigrants are inferior to older stocks. They 
are just different, and they thus tend to 
introduce cracks and divisions. 



XXIII Frivolity 

As the nation declines in power and 
wealth, a universal pessimism gradually 
pervades the people, and itself hastens the 
decline. There is nothing succeeds like 
success, and, in the Ages of Conquest and 
Commerce, the nation was carried 
triumphantly onwards on the wave of its own 
self-confidence. Republican Rome was 
repeatedly on the verge of extinction— in 390 
B.C. when the Gauls sacked the city and in 
216 B.C. after the Battle of Cannae. But no 
disasters could shake the resolution of the 
early Romans. Yet, in the later stages of 
Roman decline, the whole empire was deeply 
pessimistic, thereby sapping its own 
resolution. 

Frivolity is the frequent companion of 
pessimism. Let us eat, drink and be merry, 
for tomorrow we die. The resemblance 
between various decUning nations in this 
respect is truly surprising. The Roman mob, 
we have seen, demanded free meals and 
public games. Gladiatorial shows, chariot 
races and athletic events were their passion. 
In the Byzantine Empire the rivalries of the 
Greens and the Blues in the hippodrome 
attained the importance of a major crisis. 

Judging by the time and space allotted to 
them in the Press and television, football and 
baseball are the activities which today chiefly 
interest the public in Britain and the United 
States respectively. 

The heroes of declining nations are always 
the same— the athlete, the singer or the 
actor. The word 'celebrity' today is used to 
designate a comedian or a football player, 
not a statesman, a general, or a literary 
genius. 



The Fate of Empires 



15 



XXIV The Arab decline 

In the first half of the ninth century, 
Baghdad enjoyed its High Noon as the 
greatest and the richest city in the world. In 
861, however, the reigning Khalif (caliph), 
Mutawakkil, was murdered by his Turkish 
mercenaries, who set up a military dictator- 
ship, which lasted for some thirty years. 
During this period the empire fell apart, the 
various dominions and provinces each 
assuming virtual independence and seeking 
its own interests. Baghdad, lately the capital 
of a vast empire, found its authority limited 
to Iraq alone. 

The works of the contemporary historians 
of Baghdad in the early tenth century are still 
available. They deeply deplored the 
degeneracy of the times in which they lived, 
emphasising particularly the indifference to 
religion, the increasing materialism and the 
laxity of sexual morals. They lamented also 
the corruption of the officials of the 
government and the fact that politicians 
always seemed to amass large fortunes while 
they were in office. 

The historians commented bitterly on the 
extraordinary influence acquired by popular 
singers over young people, resulting in a 
decline in sexual morality. The 'pop' singers 
of Baghdad accompanied their erotic songs 
on the lute, an instrument resembling the 
modem guitar. In the second half of the 
tenth century, as a result, much obscene 
sexual language came increasingly into use, 
such as would not have been tolerated in an 
earlier age. Several khalifs issued orders 
banning 'pop' singers from the capital, but 
within a few years they always returned. 

An increase in the influence of women in 
public life has often been associated with na- 
tional decline. The later Romans complained 



that, although Rome ruled the world, women 
ruled Rome. In the tenth century, a similar 
tendency was observable in the Arab Empire, 
the women demanding admission to the 
professions hitherto monopolised by men. 
'What,' wrote the contemporary historian, 
Ibn Bessam, 'have the professions of clerk, 
tax-collector or preacher to do with women? 
These occupations have always been limited 
to men alone.' Many women practised law, 
while others obtained posts as university 
professors. There was an agitation for the 
appointment of female judges, which, 
however, does not appear to have succeeded. 

Soon after this period, government and 
public order collapsed, and foreign invaders 
overran the country. The resulting increase 
in confusion and violence made it unsafe for 
women to move unescorted in the streets, 
with the result that this feminist movement 
collapsed. 

The disorders following the military take- 
over in 861, and the loss of the empire, had 
played havoc with the economy. At such a 
moment, it might have been expected that 
everyone would redouble their efforts to save 
the country from bankruptcy, but nothing of 
the kind occurred. Instead, at this moment of 
declining trade and financial stringency, the 
people of Baghdad introduced a five-day 
week. 

When I first read these contemporary 
descriptions of tenth-century Baghdad, I 
could scarcely believe my eyes. I told myself 
that this must be a joke! The descriptions 
might have been taken out of The Times 
today. The resemblance of all the details was 
especially breathtaking— the break-up of the 
empire, the abandonment of sexual morality, 
the 'pop' singers with their guitars, the entry 
of women into the professions, the five-day 



16 



The Fate of Empires 



week. I would not venture to attempt an 

explanation! There are so many mysteries 
about human life which are far beyond our 
comprehension . 

XXV Political ideology 

Today we attach immense importance to 
the ideology of our internal politics. The 
Press and public media in the U.S.A. and 

Britain pour incessant scorn on any country 
the political institutions of which differ in 
any manner from our own idea of 
democracy. It is, therefore, interesting to 
note that the life-expectation of a great 
nation does not appear to be in any way 
affected by the nature of its institutions. 

Past empires show almost every possible 
variation of political system, but all go 
through the same procedure from the Age of 
Pioneers through Conquest, Commerce, 
Affluence to decline and collapse. 

XXVI The Mameluke Empire 

The empire of the Mamelukes of Egypt 
provides a case in point, for it was one of the 
most exotic ever to be recorded in history. It 
is also exceptional in that it began on one 
fixed day and ended on another, leaving no 
doubt of its precise duration, which was 267 
years. 

In the first part of the thirteenth century, 
Egypt and Syria were ruled by the Ayoubid 
sultans, the descendants of the family of 
Saladin. Their army consisted of Mamelukes, 
slaves imported as boys from the Steppes 
and trained as professional soldiers. On 1st 
May 1250, the Mamelukes mutinied, 
murdered Turan Shah, the Ayoubid sultan, 
and became the rulers of his empire. 

The first fifty years of the Mameluke 
Empire were marked by desperate fighting 



with the hitherto invincible Mongols, the 
descendants of Genghis Khan, who invaded 
Syria. By defeating the Mongols and driving 
them out of Syria, the Mamelukes saved the 
Mediterranean from the terrible fate which 
had overtaken Persia. In 1291, the Mame- 
lukes captured Acre, and put an end to the 
Crusades. 

From 1309 to 1341, the Mameluke Empire 
was everywhere victorious and possessed the 
finest army in the world. For the ensuing 
hundred years the wealth of the Mameluke 
Empire was fabulous, slowly leading to 
luxury, the relaxation of discipline and to 
decline, with ever more bitter internal 
political rivalries. Finally the empire collap- 
sed in 1517, as the result of military defeat 
by the Ottomans. 

The Mameluke government appears to us 
utterly illogical and fantastic. The ruling 
class was entirely recruited from young boys, 
born in what is now Southern Russia. Every 
one of them was enUsted as a private soldier. 
Even the sultans had begun life as private 
soldiers and had risen from the ranks. Yet 
this extraordinary political system resulted 
in an empire which passed through all the 
normal stages of conquest, commercialism, 
affluence and decUne and which lasted 
approximately the usual period of time. 

XXVII The master race 

The people of the great nations of the past 
seem normally to have imagined that their 
pre-eminence would last for ever. Rome 
appeared to its citizens to be destined to be 
for all time the mistress of the world. The 
Abbasid Khalifs of Baghdad declared that 
God had appointed them to rule mankind 
until the day of judgement. Seventy years 
ago, many people in Britain believed that the 



The Fate of Empires 



17 



empire would endure for ever. Although 
Hitler failed to achieve his objective, he 
declared that Germany would rule the world 
for a thousand years. That sentiments like 
these could be publicly expressed without 
evoking derision shows that, in all ages, the 
regular rise and fall of great nations has 
passed unperceived. The simplest statistics 
prove the steady rotation of one nation after 
another at regular intervals. 

The belief that their nation would rule the 
world forever, naturally encouraged the 
citizens of the leading nation of any period to 
attribute their pre-eminence to hereditary 
virtues. They carried in their blood, they 
believed, qualities which constituted them a 
race of supermen, an illusion which inclined 
them to the employment of cheap foreign 
labour (or slaves) to perform menial tasks 
and to engage foreign mercenaries to fight 
their battles or to sail their ships. 

These poorer peoples were only too happy 
to migrate to the wealthy cities of the empire, 
and thereby, as we have seen, to adulterate 
the close-knit, homogeneous character of the 
conquering race. The latter unconsciously 
assumed that they would always be the 
leaders of mankind, relaxed their energies, 
and spent an increasing part of their time in 
leisure, amusement or sport. 

In recent years, the idea has spread widely 
in the West that 'progress' will be automatic 
without effort, that everyone will continue to 
grow richer and richer and that every year 
will show a 'rise in the standard of living'. We 
have not drawn from history the obvious 
conclusion that material success is the result 
of courage, endurance and hard work— a 
conclusion nevertheless obvious from the 
history of the meteoric rise of our own 
ancestors. This self-assurance of its own 



superiority seems to go hand-in-hand with 
the luxury resulting from wealth, in 
undermining the character of the dominant 
race. 

XXVIII The welfare state 

When the welfare state was first introduced 
in Britain, it was hailed as a new high-water 
mark in the history of human development. 

History, however, seems to suggest that the 
age of decline of a great nation is often a 
period which shows a tendency to 
philanthropy and to sympathy for other 
races. This phase may not be contradictory 
to the feeling described in the previous 
paragraph, that the dominant race has the 
right to rule the world. For the citizens of the 
great nation enjoy the role of Lady Bountiful. 
As long as it retains its status of leadership, 
the imperial people are glad to be generous, 
even if slightly condescending. The rights of 
citizenship are generously bestowed on every 
race, even those formerly subject, and the 
equality of mankind is proclaimed. The 
Roman Empire passed through this phase, 
when equal citizenship was thrown open to 
all peoples, such provincials even becoming 
senators and emperors. 

The Arab Empire of Baghdad was equally, 
perhaps even more, generous. During the 
Age of Conquests, pure-bred Arabs had 
constituted a ruling class, but in the ninth 
century the empire was completely 
cosmopolitan. 

State assistance to the young and the poor 
was equally generous. University students 
received government grants to cover their 
expenses while they were receiving higher 
education. The State likewise offered free 
medical treatment to the poor. The first free 
public hospital was opened in Baghdad in 



18 



The Fate of Empires 



the reign of Hanin al-Rashid (786-809), and 
under his son, Mamun, free pubhc hospitals 
sprang up all over the Arab world from Spain 
to what is now Pakistan. 

The impression that it will always be 
automatically rich causes the declining 
empire to spend lavishly on its own 
benevolence, until such time as the economy 
collapses, the universities are closed and the 
hospitals fall into ruin. 

It may perhaps be incorrect to picture the 
welfare state as the high-water mark of 
human attainment. It may merely prove to 
be one more regular milestone in the life- 
story of an ageing and decrepit empire. 

XXIX Religion 

Historians of periods of decadence often 
refer to a decline in religion, but, if we 
extend our investigation over a period 
covering the Assyrians (859-612 B.C.) to our 
own times, we have to interpret religion in a 
very broad sense. Some such definition as 
'the human feeling that there is something, 
some invisible Power, apart from material 
objects, which controls human life and the 
natural world'. 

We are probably too narrow and 
contemptuous in our interpretation of idol 
worship. The people of ancient civilisations 
were as sensible as we are, and would 
scarcely have been so foolish as to worship 
sticks and stones fashioned by their own 
hands. The idol was for them merely a 
symbol, and represented an unknown, 
spiritual reality, which controlled the lives of 
men and demanded human obedience to its 
moral precepts. 

We all know only too well that minor 
differences in the human visualisation of this 
Spirit frequently became the ostensible 



reason for human wars, in which both sides 
claimed to be fighting for the true God, but 
the absurd narrowness of human 
conceptions should not blind us to the fact 
that, very often, both sides believed their 
campaigns to have a moral background. 
Genghis Khan, one of the most brutal of all 
conquerors, claimed that God had delegated 
him the duty to exterminate the decadent 
races of the civilised world. Thus the Age of 
Conquests often had some kind of religious 
atmosphere, which implied heroic self- 
sacrifice for the cause. 

But this spirit of dedication was slowly 
eroded in the Age of Commerce by the action 
of money. People make money for 
themselves, not for their country. Thus 
periods of affluence gradually dissolved the 
spirit of service, which had caused the rise of 
the imperial races. 

In due course, selfishness permeated the 
community, the coherence of which was 
weakened until disintegration was 
threatened. Then, as we have seen, came the 
period of pessimism with the accompanying 
spirit of frivolity and sensual indulgence, by- 
products of despair. It was inevitable at such 
times that men should look back yearningly 
to the days of 'religion', when the spirit of 
self-sacrifice was still strong enough to make 
men ready to give and to serve, rather than 
to snatch. 

But while despair might permeate the 
greater part of the nation, others achieved a 
new realisation of the fact that only readi- 
ness for self-sacrifice could enable a commu- 
nity to survive. Some of the greatest saints in 
history lived in times of national decadence, 
raising the banner of duty and service 
against the flood of depravity and despair. 



The Fate of Empires 



19 



In this manner, at the height of vice and 
frivoUty the seeds of reUgious revival are 
quietly sown. After, perhaps, several 
generations (or even centuries) of suffering, 
the impoverished nation has been purged of 
its selfishness and its love of money, reUgion 
regains its sway and a new era sets in. 'It is 
good for me that I have been afflicted,' said 
the psalmist, 'that I might learn Thy 
Statutes.' 

XXX New combinations 

We have traced the rise of an obscure race 
to fame, through the stages of conquest, 
commercialism, affluence, and intellectu- 
alism, to disintegration, decadence and 
despair. We suggested that the dominant 
race at any given time imparts its leading 
characteristics to the world around, being in 
due course succeeded by another empire. By 
this means, we speculated, many successive 
races succeeded one another as super- 
powers, and in turn bequeathed their 
peculiar qualities to mankind at large. 

But the objection may here be raised that 
some day the time will come when all the 
races of the world will in turn have enjoyed 
their period of domination and have 
collapsed again in decadence. When the 
whole human race has reached the stage of 
decadence, where will new energetic con- 
quering races be found? 

The answer is at first partially obscured by 
our modem habit of dividing the human race 
into nations, which we seem to regard as 
water-tight compartments, an error respon- 
sible for innumerable misunderstandings. 

In earlier times, warlike nomadic nations 
invaded the territories of decadent peoples 
and settled there. In due course, they 



intermarried with the local population and a 
new race resulted, though it sometimes 
retained an old name. The barbarian 
invasions of the Roman Empire probably 
provide the example best known today in the 
West. Others were the Arab conquests of 
Spain, North Africa and Persia, the Turkish 
conquests of the Ottoman Empire, or even 
the Norman Conquest of England. 

In all such cases, the conquered countries 
were originally fully inhabited and the inva- 
ders were armies, which ultimately settled 
down and married, and produced new races. 

In our times, there are few nomadic 
conquerors left in the world, who could 
invade more settled countries bringing their 
tents and flocks with them. But ease of travel 
has resulted in an equal, or probably an even 
greater, intermixture of populations. The 
extreme bitterness of modem internal poli- 
tical straggles produces a constant flow of 
migrants from their native countries to 
others, where the social institutions suit 
them better. 

The vicissitudes of trade and business 
similarly result in many persons moving to 
other countries, at first intending to retum, 
but ultimately settUng down in their new 
countries. 

The population of Britain has been 
constantly changing, particularly in the last 
sixty years, owing to the influx of immigrants 
from Europe, Asia and Africa, and the exit of 
British citizens to the Dominions and the 
United States. The latter is, of course, the 
most obvious example of the constant rise of 
new nations, and of the transformation of 
the ethnic content of old nations through this 
modem nomadism. 



20 



The Fate of Empires 



XXXI Decadence of a system 

It is of interest to note that decadence is 
the disintegration of a system, not of its 
individual members. The habits of the 
members of the community have been 
corrupted by the enjojTiient of too much 
money and too much power for too long a 
period. The result has been, in the 
framework of their national life, to make 
them selfish and idle. A community of selfish 
and idle people declines, internal quarrels 
develop in the division of its dwindling 
wealth, and pessimism follows, which some 
of them endeavour to drown in sensuality or 
frivolity. In their own surroundings, they are 
unable to redirect their thoughts and their 
energies into new channels. 

But when individual members of such a 
society emigrate into entirely new surroun- 
dings, they do not remain conspicuously 
decadent, pessimistic or immoral among the 
inhabitants of their new homeland. Once 
enabled to break away from their old 
channels of thought, and after a short period 
of readjustment, they become normal 
citizens of their adopted countries. Some of 
them, in the second and third generations, 
may attain pre-eminence and leadership in 
their new communities. 

This seems to prove that the decline of any 
nation does not undermine the energies or 
the basic character of its members. Nor does 
the decadence of a number of such nations 
permanently impoverish the human race. 
Decadence is both mental and moral 
deterioration, produced by the slow decUne 
of the community from which its members 
cannot escape, as long as they remain in 
their old surroundings. But, transported 
elsewhere, they soon discard their decadent 



ways of thought, and prove themselves equal 
to the other citizens of their adopted country. 

XXXII Decadence is not physical 

Neither is decadence physical. The citizens 
of nations in decline are sometimes 
described as too physically emasculated to be 
able to bear hardship or make great efforts. 
This does not seem to be a true picture. 
Citizens of great nations in decadence are 
normally physically larger and stronger than 
those of their barbarian invaders. 

Moreover, as was proved in Britain in the 
first World War, young men brought up in 
luxury and wealth found little difficulty in 
accustoming themselves to life in the front- 
line trenches. The history of exploration 
proves the same point. Men accustomed to 
comfortable living in homes in Europe or 
America were able to show as much 
endurance as the natives in riding camels 
across the desert or in hacking their way 
through tropical forests. 

Decadence is a moral and spiritual disease, 
resulting from too long a period of wealth 
and power, producing cynicism, decline of 
religion, pessimism and frivolity. The 
citizens of such a nation will no longer make 
an effort to save themselves, because they 
are not convinced that anjrthing in life is 
worth saving. 

XXXII Human diversity 

Generalisations are always dangerous. 
Human beings are all different. The variety 
in human life is endless. If this be the case 
with individuals, it is much more so with 
nations and cultures. No two societies, no 
two peoples, no two cultures are exactly the 
same. In these circumstances, it will be easy 



The Fate of Empires 



21 



for critics to find many objections to what 
has been said, and to point out exceptions to 
the generaUsations. 

There is some value in comparing the hves 
of nations to those of individuals. No two 
persons in the world are identical. Moreover 
their lives are often affected by accidents or 
by illness, making the divergences even more 
obvious. Yet, in fact, we can generalise about 
human life from many different aspects. The 
characteristics of childhood, adolescence, 
youth, middle and old age are well known. 
Some adolescents, it is true, are prematurely 
wise and serious. Some persons in middle 
age still seem to he young. But such 
exceptions do not invalidate the general 
character of human life from the cradle to 
the grave. 

I venture to submit that the lives of nations 
follow a similar pattern. Superficially, all 
seem to be completely different. Some years 
ago, a suggestion was submitted to a certain 
television corporation that a series of talks 
on Arab history would form an interesting 
sequence. The proposal was immediately 
vetoed by the director of programmes with 
the remark, "What earthly interest could the 
history of medieval Arabs have for the 
general public today?" 

Yet, in fact, the history of the Arab imperial 
age— from conquest through commercialism, 
to affluence, intellectualism, science and 
decadence— is an exact precursor of British 
imperial history and lasted almost exactly 
the same time. 

If British historians, a century ago, had 
devoted serious study to the Arab Empire, 
they could have foreseen almost everything 
that has happened in Britain down to 1976. 



XXXIV A variety of falls 

It has been shown that, normally, the rise 
and fall of great nations are due to internal 
reasons alone. Ten generations of human 
beings suffice to transform the hardy and 
enterprising pioneer into the captious citizen 
of the welfare state. But whereas the life 
histories of great nations show an unex- 
pected uniformity, the nature of their falls 
depends largely on outside circumstances 
and thus shows a high degree of diversity. 

The Roman Republic, as we have seen, was 
followed by the empire, which became a 
super-state, in which all the natives of the 
Mediterranean basin, regardless of race, 
possessed equal rights. The name of Rome, 
originally a city-state, passed from it to an 
equalitarian international empire. 

This empire broke in half, the western half 
being overrun by northern barbarians, the 
eastern half forming the East Roman or 
Byzantine Empire. 

The vast Arab Empire broke up in the 
ninth century into many fragments, of which 
one former colony, Moslem Spain, ran its 
own 250-year course as an independent 
empire. The homelands of Syria and Iraq, 
however, were conquered by successive 
waves of Turks to whom they remained 
subject for 1,000 years. 

The Mameluke Empire of Egypt and Syria, 
on the other hand, was conquered in one 
campaign by the Ottomans, the native 
population merely suffering a change of 
masters. 

The Spanish Empire (1500-1750) endured 
for the conventional 250 years, terminated 
only by the loss of its colonies. The homeland 
of Spain fell, indeed, from its high estate of a 



22 



The Fate of Empires 



super-power, but remained as an indepen- 
dent nation until today. 

Romanov Russia (1682-1916) ran the 
normal course, but was succeeded by the 
Soviet Union. 

It is unnecessary to labour the point, which 
we may attempt to summarise briefly. Any 
regime which attains great wealth and power 
seems with remarkable regularity to decay 
and fall apart in some ten generations. The 
ultimate fate of its component parts, 
however, does not depend on its internal 
nature, but on the other organisations which 
appear at the time of its collapse and succeed 
in devouring its heritage. Thus the lives of 
great powers are surprisingly uniform, but 
the results of their falls are completely 
diverse. 

XXXV Inadequacy of our historical 
studies 

In fact, the modem nations of the West 
have derived only limited value from their 
historical studies, because they have never 
made them big enough. For history to have 
meaning, as we have already stated, it must 
be the history of the human race. 

Far from achieving such an ideal, our 
historical studies are largely limited to the 
history of our own country during the 
lifetime of the present nation. Thus the time- 
factor is too short to allow the longer 
rhythms of the rise and fall of nations even to 
be noticed. As the television director 
indicated, it never even crosses our minds 
that longer periods could be of any interest. 

When we read the history of our own 
nation, we find the actions of our ancestors 
described as glorious, while those of other 
peoples are depicted as mean, tyrannical or 
cowardly. Thus our history is (intentionally) 



not based on facts. We are emotionally 
unwilling to accept that our forbears might 
have been mean or cowardly. 

Alternatively, there are 'political' schools of 
history, slanted to discredit the actions of 
our past leaders, in order to support modern 
political movements. In all these cases, 
history is not an attempt to ascertain the 
truth, but a system of propaganda, devoted 
to the furtherance of modem projects, or the 
gratification of national vanity. 

Men can scarcely be blamed for not 
leaming from the history they are taught. 
There is nothing to leam from it, because it 
is not tme. 

XXXVI Small nations 

The word 'empires' has been used in this 
essay to signify nations which achieve the 
status of great powers, or super-powers, in 
the jargon of today— nations which have 
dominated the international scene for two or 
three centuries. At any given time, however, 
there are also smaller states which are more 
or less self-contained. Do these live the same 
'lives' as the great nations, and pass through 
the same phases? 

It seems impossible to generalise on this 
issue. In general, decadence is the outcome 
of too long a period of wealth and power. If 
the small country has not shared in the 
wealth and power, it will not share in the 
decadence. 

XXXVII The emerging pattern 

In spite of the endless variety and the 
infinite complications of human life, a 
general pattem does seem to emerge from 
these considerations. It reveals many 
successive empires covering some 3,000 
years, as having followed similar stages of 



The Fate of Empires 



23 



development and decline, and as having, to a 
surprising degree, 'lived' lives of very similar 
length. 

The life-expectation of a great nation, it 
appears, commences with a violent, and 
usually unforeseen, outburst of energy, and 
ends in a lowering of moral standards, 
cjmicism, pessimism and frivolity. 

If the present writer were a millionaire, he 
would try to establish in some university or 
other a department dedicated solely to the 
study of the rh3rthm of the rise and fall of 
powerful nations throughout the world. 
History goes back only some 3,000 years, 
because before that period writing was not 
sufficiently widespread to allow of the 
survival of detailed records. But within that 
period, the number of empires available for 
study is very great. 

At the commencement of this essay, the 
names of eleven such empires were listed, 
but these included only the Middle East and 
the modem nations of the West. India, China 
and Southern America were not included, 
because the writer knows nothing about 
them. A school founded to study the rise and 
fall of empires would probably find at least 
twenty-four great powers available for 
dissection and analysis. 

The task would not be an easy one, if 
indeed the net were cast so wide as to cover 
virtually all the world's great nations in 3,000 
years. The knowledge of language alone, to 
enable detailed investigations to be pursued, 
would present a formidable obstacle. 

XXXVIII Would it help? 

It is pleasing to imagine that, from such 
studies, a regular life-pattern of nations 
would emerge, including an analysis of the 
various changes which ultimately lead to 



decline, decadence and collapse. It is 
tempting to assume that measures could be 
adopted to forestall the disastrous effects of 
excessive wealth and power, and thence of 
subsequent decadence. Perhaps some means 
could be devised to prevent the activist Age 
of Conquests and Commerce deteriorating 
into the Age of Intellect, producing endless 
talking but no action. 

It is tempting to think so. Perhaps if the 
pattern of the rise and fall of nations were 
regularly taught in schools, the general 
public would come to realise the truth, and 
would support poUcies to maintain the spirit 
of duty and self-sacrifice, and to forestall the 
accumulation of excessive wealth by one 
nation, leading to the demoralisation of that 
nation. 

Could not the sense of duty and the 
initiative needed to give rise to action be 
retained parallel with intellectual develop- 
ment and the discoveries of natural science? 

The answer is doubtfiil, though we could 
but try. The weaknesses of human nature, 
however, are so obvious, that we cannot be 
too confident of success. Men bursting with 
courage, energy and self-confidence cannot 
easily be restrained from subduing their 
neighbours, and men who see the prospect of 
wealth open to them will not readily be 
prevented fi-om pursuing it. 

Perhaps it is not in the real interest of 
humanity that they should be so prevented, 
for it is in periods of wealth that art, 
architecture, music, science and literature 
make the greatest progress. 

Moreover, as we have seen where great 
empires are concerned, their establishment 
may give rise to wars and tragedies, but their 
periods of power often bring peace, security 
and prosperity to vast areas of territory. Our 



24 



The Fate of Empires 



knowledge and our experience (perhaps our 
basic human intellects) are inadequate to 
pronounce whether or not the rise and fall of 
great nations is the best system for the best 
of all possible worlds. 

These doubts, however, need not prevent 
us from attempting to acquire more 
knowledge on the rise and fall of great 
powers, or from endeavouring, in the light of 
such knowledge, to improve the moral 
quality of human life. 

Perhaps, in fact, we may reach the 
conclusion that the successive rise and fall of 
great nations is inevitable and, indeed, a 
system divinely ordained. But even this 
would be an immense gain. For we should 
know where we stand in relation to our 
human brothers and sisters. In our present 
state of mental chaos on the subject, we 
divide ourselves into nations, parties or 
communities and fight, hate and vilify one 
another over developments which may 
perhaps be divinely ordained and which 
seem to us, if we take a broader view, 
completely uncontrollable and inevitable. If 
we could accept these great movements as 
beyond our control, there would be no 
excuse for our hating one another because of 
them. 

However varied, confusing and contra- 
dictory the religious history of the world may 
appear, the noblest and most spiritual of the 
devotees of all religions seem to reach the 
conclusion that love is the key to human life. 
Any expansion of our knowledge which may 
lead to a reduction in our unjustified hates is 
therefore surely well worth while. 



XXXIX Summary 

As numerous points of interest have arisen 
in the course of this essay, I close with a brief 
summary, to refresh the reader's mind. 

(a) We do not learn from history because 
our studies are brief and prejudiced. 

(b) In a surprising manner, 250 years 
emerges as the average length of national 
greatness. 

(c) This average has not varied for 3,000 
years. Does it represent ten generations? 

(d) The stages of the rise and fall of great 
nations seem to be: 

The Age of Pioneers (outburst) 

The Age of Conquests 

The Age of Commerce 

The Age of Affluence 

The Age of Intellect 

The Age of Decadence. 

(e) Decadence is marked by: 
Defensiveness 
Pessimism 
Materialism 

Frivolity 

An influx of foreigners 

The Welfare State 

A weakening of religion. 

(f) Decadence is due to: 

Too long a period of wealth and power 

Selfishness 

Love of money 

The loss of a sense of duty. 

(g) The life histories of great states are 
amazingly similar, and are due to internal 
factors. 

(h) Their falls are diverse, because they are 
largely the result of external causes. 

(i) History should be taught as the history 
of the human race, though of course with 
emphasis on the history of the student's own 
country.