Agent of Byzantium

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Agent of Byzantium
ISBN
0-86553-183-8

Agent of Byzantium is a 1987 collection of short stories by

Sassanid Persia
survive.

Setting

The world of the Agent of Byzantium series.

In this universe, the

Sassanid Empire
, represented in the series by the female spy Mirrane.

Argyros works as an

James Bond and Dominic Flandry.[2]

The Jurchens - who in actual history played an important role in Chinese history and never showed an inclination to migrate westwards - did in this changed timeline move across Siberia, reach the borders of the Byzantine Empire and there pose a serious threat. Turtledove does not explain how Muhammad becoming Christian had this eventual drastic effect on the behavior of the Jurchens in the Far East.

Stories and publication history

Stories in the Agent of Byzantium universe (in order written) are:

The first six stories comprise the first edition of Agent of Byzantium, published in 1987 by Congdon & Weed. "Pillar of Cloud, Pillar of Fire" and "Departures" were first published in the

Departures collection in 1993. "Pillar of Cloud, Pillar of Fire" was included in the second edition of Agent of Byzantium, published in 1994 by Baen Books
. "The Eyes of Argos" was also published in the There Will Be War IV: Guns of Darkness collection in 1987.

Reception

Orson Scott Card praised Turtledove as "a very talented science fiction writer, with a gift for finding a way to present a fascinating idea through strong, believable characters."[3]

Differences

Turtledove, who has a PhD in Byzantine history, created a setting for the series in which the world of

Late Antiquity
is projected seven centuries into the future. In each story, several familiar inventions and social institutions crop up far ahead of schedule, and under very different circumstances than they did in our world. Among these are:

  • The telescope, discovered among the shamans of the Jurchen nomads who threaten the Byzantine Empire from the north.
  • Vaccination for smallpox, which is discovered during a terrible plague afflicting Constantinople itself.
  • Trade unions and strikes, appearing first among the builders engaged in the dangerous rebuilding of a great lighthouse in Alexandria, Egypt (an Egyptian village, Deir el-Medina, is where the first recorded strike in history occurred in 1152 BC).
  • Norman Conquest
    .
  • Printing, invented by the Byzantine Empire's Persian enemies and used to foment sedition and dissension inside its borders, until this secret is also apprehended by Argyros.
  • Distilling, invented by a wine-seller in Constantinople and purchased for the empire by Argyros.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Uchronia: Agent of Byzantium". www.uchronia.net.
  2. ^ Turtledove, Harry. Agent of Byzantium. Baen, 1994.
  3. F&SF
    , May 1987