Note 001
For the general history of Italy in the ixth
and xth centuries, I may properly refer to the vth, vith,
and viith books of Sigonius de Regno Italiae, (in the second
volume of his works, Milan, 1732;) the Annals of Baronius,
with the criticism of Pagi; the viith and viiith books of
the Istoria Civile del Regno di Napoli of Giannone; the
viith and viiith volumes (the octavo edition) of the Annali
d' Italia of Muratori, and the 2d volume of the Abregé
Chronologique of M. de St. Marc, a work which, under a
superficial title, contains much genuine learning and
industry. But my long-accustomed reader will give me credit
for saying, that I myself have ascended to the fountain
head, as often as such ascent could be either profitable or
possible; and that I have diligently turned over the
originals in the first volumes of Muratori's great
collection of the Scriptores Rerum Italicarum.
The History Of The Decline And
Fall Of The Roman Empire
—Fall In The East
—Chapter 56