Worlds of Byzantium offers a new understanding of what it means to study the history and visual culture of the Byzantine empire during late antiquity and the Middle Ages. Arguing that linguistic and cultural frontiers do not always coincide with political ones, it suggests that Byzantine studies should look not only within but also beyond the borders of the Byzantine empire and include the history of Christian populations in the Muslim-ruled Middle East and neighbouring states like Ethiopia and Armenia and integrate more closely with Judaic and Islamic studies. With essays by leading scholars in a wide range of fields, it offers a vision of a richly interconnected eastern Mediterranean and Near East that will be of interest to anyone who studies the premodern world.
Privileging culture and language over politics, this book offers an expanded understanding of what it means to study the Byzantine empire in the late antique and medieval periods, one that explicitly includes the Christian populations of the Muslim-ruled Middle East as well as neighbouring states like Ethiopia and Armenia.
Papildus informācija
Offers a fresh and expanded understanding of what it means to study the history and culture of the Byzantine empire.
Preface Elizabeth S. Bolman, Scott Johnson and Jack Tannous;
1. Worlds
of Byzantium: problems, frameworks, and opportunity in the Byzantine near
east Scott Fitzgerald Johnson; Part I. Patterns, Paradigms, Scholarship:
2.
East of Byzantium revisited: the study of the Byzantine near east, past and
present Columba Stewart;
3. Byzantium and the turn to the east Averil
Cameron;
4. The classical near east Kevin T. van Bladel;
5. Alternatives to
commonwealth: modes of connectivity between Byzantium and Medieval Eastern
Europe Christian Raffensperger; Part II. Images, Objects, Archaeology:
6.
Movement and creation: a reassessment of early Byzantine visual culture
Elizabeth S. Bolman;
7. Letters from the edge: mapping Pseudo-Arabic between
Byzantium and the near east Alicia Walker;
8. Antioch after dark: archaeology
and the 'Dark Ages' in North Syria Michael J. Decker;
9. Ars Sacra in the
east and after Byzantium Cecily J. Hilsdale;
10. The church of the virgin in
Dayr al-Suryn (Wadi al-Natrun): architecture, art, and history between
Coptic and Syriac Christianity Karel C. Innemée, Lucas Van Rompay and
Dobrochna Zieliska;
11. Three questions concerning Armenian and Byzantine
art Christina Maranci;
12. Makurian visual culture: between Byzantium and
Africa Wodzimierz Godlewski; Part III. Languages, Confessions, Empire:
13.
Byzantine Syriac: language and religious community in the middle east Jack
Tannous;
14. Greek identity in the Sinai Hieromonk Justin of Sinai;
15.
Patriarchs, caliphs, monks, scribes, and the Byzantinization of Jerusalem's
liturgy Daniel Galadza;
16. Byzantine Judaism in early Islamic Palestine:
rethinking the Gaonic model Eve Krakowski;
17. Ethiopia: Christianity,
language, and identity George Hatke;
18. Armenia and Byzantium:
simultaneously at the center and on the periphery Robin Darling Young;
19.
Byzantine Georgia/Georgian Byzantium Stephen Rapp Jr.;
20. Conclusion: ends
and means Jack Tannous; Index.
ELIZABETH S. BOLMAN is Elsie B. Smith Professor in the Liberal Arts and Professor of Art History at Case Western Reserve University. She engages with the visual culture of the eastern Mediterranean in the late antique and Byzantine periods and is best known for her work in Egypt. SCOTT FITZGERALD JOHNSON is Associate Professor of Classics and Letters at the University of Oklahoma. He is the author of numerous studies on late antique and Byzantine history and literature and has held fellowships at Harvard University, Dumbarton Oaks, and the Library of Congress and received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2018. JACK TANNOUS is Associate Professor of History and Hellenic Studies at Princeton University, where he is also Director of the Program in Hellenic Studies. His research focuses on the Greek, Syriac, and Arabic-speaking Christian communities of the Middle East in the late antique and medieval periods.