Structural Divergence of the Roman--Byzantine Trade Network, 0--1453\,CE: Persistent Homology, Topological Velocity, and Criticality Indicators of Imperial Collapse

Abstract

We extend the persistent homology analysis of~ to the full Roman--Byzantine trade network (0--1453\,ce), using 2,599 nodes and 4,503 trimodal edges calibrated against the orbis Geospatial Network Model. Five results are reported. % (i)~The Ht=0 western sub-network result of~ is a data-coverage artifact: with full western representation (N west=987, β1≈52 cycles per decade) a baseline East--West entropy gap of +2.22 units is present from 0\,ce and grows at +3.3×10-3\,yr-1, predating the Theodosian partition by four centuries. % (ii)~A hub-selection artifact in degree-heterogeneous networks can reverse the sign of the inferred Phase~III slope, requiring full-coverage or stratified sampling for reliable structural-break detection. % (iii)~Decomposing Byzantine resilience into geographic (H geo) and economic (H eco) components reveals a peak decoupling ratio Rd = H eco/H geo = 47.7 at 620\,ce, falling to 13.9 at 640\,ce, quantifying the McCormick--Ward-Perkins historiographical debate as a contrast between two network layers operating on different timescales. % (iv)~The inter-decade W2 Wasserstein velocity identifies the Late Roman--Early Byzantine transition (495\,ce) as the highest topological-velocity event of the 1,453-year record; the cross-network Wasserstein ratio increases by 150--300× after the Chrysobull of 1082\,ce, providing an independent diagram-space analogue of Rd. Both the Western collapse (476\,ce) and the Byzantine endpoint (1453\,ce) occur at H≈0.524, interpreted as a candidate topological percolation threshold.

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