PAIXUE PROJECT GENERAL BIBLIOGRAPHY Abramson, Marc S
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Nikephoros Bryennios the Younger – the First One Not to Become a Blind Man? Political and Military History of the Bryennios Family in the 11Th and Early 12Th Century
Studia Ceranea 10, 2020, p. 31–45 ISSN: 2084-140X DOI: 10.18778/2084-140X.10.02 e-ISSN: 2449-8378 Marcin Böhm (Opole) https://orcid.org/0000-0002-5393-3176 Nikephoros Bryennios the Younger – the First One Not to Become a Blind Man? Political and Military History of the Bryennios Family in the 11th and Early 12th Century ikephoros Bryennios the Younger (1062–1137) has a place in the history N of the Byzantine Empire as a historian and husband of Anna Komnene (1083–1153), a woman from the imperial family. His historical work on the his- tory of the Komnenian dynasty in the 11th century is an extremely valuable source of information about the policies of the empire’s major families, whose main goal was to seize power in Constantinople1. Nikephoros was also a talented commander, which he proved by serving his father-in-law Alexios I Komnenos (1081–1118) and brother-in-law John II Komnenos (1118–1143). The marriage gave him free access to people and documents which he also enriched with the history of his own family. It happened because Nikephoros Bryennios was not the first representative of his family who played an important role in the internal policy of the empire. He had two predecessors, his grandfather, and great grand- father, who according to the family tradition had the same name as our hero. They 1 J. Seger, Byzantinische Historiker des zehnten und elften Jahrhunderts, vol. I, Nikephoros Bryennios, München 1888, p. 31–33; W. Treadgold, The Middle Byzantine Historians, Basingstoke 2013, p. 344–345; A. -
A Newsletter Published by the Canadian Committee of Byzantinists
CANADIO-BYZANTINA A Newsletter published by the Canadian Committee of Byzantinists No. 19 - February 2008 (alcareous ridge above River Raut, Orheiul Vechi, Moldova (Photograph by AR. Litilewood) 2007 was a notable yearfor Canadian Byzantinists sincefor on/v the second time a Canadian university (Toronto) hosted the annual Byzantine Studies Conference. Glen Peers chaired a largely Canadian Programme Committee and Linda Safran was an excellent local organizer. Linda, furthermore, is now the president ofthe Byzantine Studies Association ofNorth America; and I am grate/it! to her/or describing this to those of us still not properly cognizant with our neii’ “umbrella “. She has also promised to make “Canadio— Bvzantina “ available ‘‘on line “, a/though antediluvian members of the Canadian Comm i/lee (like mvse//i can relax since we shall continue to receive a real copy on genuine old-fashioned paper. Canadian Byzantinists have recently been able to welcome two new and exciting recruits. Full biographical details of Anne- Laurence Caudano and Dimitri Krallis, who have joined the University of Winnipeg and Simon Fraser University respectively, may befound under “Activities ofMembers ‘ It is always pleasant to record members ‘personal distinctions; and this year we are happily able to congratulate, in addition to Linda, three more of our peers. John Osborne has been elected an Honorary Fellow at the British School at Rome; Jim Payton was elected president of CAREE (Christians Associatedfor Relationships with Eastern Europe) in November 2006; -
Paul MAGDALINO Domaines De Recherche Adresse Personnelle
Paul MAGDALINO Professeur émérite de l’Université de St Andrews (Ecosse) Distinguished Research Professor, Koç University, Istanbul Membre de l’Académie Britannique Domaines de recherche Culture littéraire et religieuse de Constantinople Mentalités et représentation du pouvoir Urbanisme métropolitain et provincial Adresse personnelle 2 route de Volage, 01420, Corbonod, France Tél. 04 57 05 10 54 Curriculum vitae Né le 10 mai 1948 Etudes à Oxford, 1967-1977 Doctorat (DPhil) 1977 Enseignant (Maître de conférences, professeur associé, professeur), University of Saint Andrews, 1977-2009 Professeur à l’Université Koç d’Istanbul, 2004-2008 et 2010-2014 Fellow à Dumbarton Oaks, 1974-1975, 1994, 2013, 2015 Andrew Mellon Fellow, Catholic University of America, 1976-1977 A. v. Humboldt- Stipendiat, Frankfurt (1980-1981), Munich (1983), Berlin (2013) Professeur invité, Harvard University, 1995-1996 Directeur d’études invité, EPHE (1997, 2007), EHESS (2005) Chercheur invité à Dumbarton Oaks, 2006 Membre de l’Académie britannique depuis 2002 Membre correspondant de l’Institut de recherches byzantines de l’Université de Thessalonique (depuis 2010) Comités scientifiques et éditoriaux 1992 –Collection 'The Medieval Mediterranean', Brill 1993– Committee for the British Academy project on the Prosopography of the Byzantine Empire. 2001–7 Senior Fellows Committee, Dumbarton Oaks, Program in Byzantine Studies 2002 – Collection ‘Oxford Studies in Byzantium', Oxford University Press. 2006- La Pomme d’or, Geneva, chief editor 2007 – Comoité editorial de la revue Byzantinische Zeitschrift 2013-2014 – Editorial board of Koç University Press Publications Ouvrages 1976 (en collaboration avec Clive Foss) Rome and Byzantium (Oxford, 1976) 1991 Tradition and Transformation in Medieval Byzantium (Aldershot 1992) 1993 The Empire of Manuel I Komnenos, 1143-1180 (Cambridge, 1993). -
TOWARDS the MACEDONIAN RENAISSANCE (Macedonian Textbooks of the Nineteenth Century)
INSTITUTE OF NATIONAL HISTORY TOWARDS THE MACEDONIAN RENAISSANCE (Macedonian Textbooks of the Nineteenth Century) by BLAZE KONESKI SKOPJE - 1961 CONTENTS Introduction Macedonian Text-books of the Nineteenth Century The Activities of Parteni Zografski Kuzman Sapkarev and other Followers of Parteni Zografski The Macedonist G'org'i (G'orgo) Pulevski Conclusion I INTRODUCTION 1 In this work the Macedonian Renaissance is viewed from one particular aspect - that of the appearance of Macedonian text-books in the course of the last century. This is in the foreground. The work is concerned with textbooks which were: 1) Compiled by Macedonians and published between1857 and 1880. 2) Written in Macedonian or with many elements of the language of our people. 3) Used in Macedonian schools or generally among the people (e.g. for self- education). We mention a total of sixteen such books by the following writers: Parteni Zografski, Kuzman Šapkarev, Dimitar V. Makedonski and Gjorgji Pulevski. The period of their publication is an especially important and interesting one for our new national history. It was the time when, though still in embryo, some of the basic historical factors which were later to influence our further national development were emerging. The publication of Macedonian text-books together with their use in schools, reflecting, as it does, the independent development of the Macedonian people, represents for us an important cultural and historical phenomenon. Interest in them is, therefore, not restricted solely to surveying them from the linguistic and pedagogical viewpoint. It is directed first of all to the question: what does the publication of these text-books reveal of our national development about the middle of the last century and later. -
Terminology Associated with Silk in the Middle Byzantine Period (AD 843-1204) Julia Galliker University of Michigan
University of Nebraska - Lincoln DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln Textile Terminologies from the Orient to the Centre for Textile Research Mediterranean and Europe, 1000 BC to 1000 AD 2017 Terminology Associated with Silk in the Middle Byzantine Period (AD 843-1204) Julia Galliker University of Michigan Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/texterm Part of the Ancient History, Greek and Roman through Late Antiquity Commons, Art and Materials Conservation Commons, Classical Archaeology and Art History Commons, Classical Literature and Philology Commons, Fiber, Textile, and Weaving Arts Commons, Indo-European Linguistics and Philology Commons, Jewish Studies Commons, Museum Studies Commons, Near Eastern Languages and Societies Commons, and the Other History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons Galliker, Julia, "Terminology Associated with Silk in the Middle Byzantine Period (AD 843-1204)" (2017). Textile Terminologies from the Orient to the Mediterranean and Europe, 1000 BC to 1000 AD. 27. http://digitalcommons.unl.edu/texterm/27 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Centre for Textile Research at DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. It has been accepted for inclusion in Textile Terminologies from the Orient to the Mediterranean and Europe, 1000 BC to 1000 AD by an authorized administrator of DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln. Terminology Associated with Silk in the Middle Byzantine Period (AD 843-1204) Julia Galliker, University of Michigan In Textile Terminologies from the Orient to the Mediterranean and Europe, 1000 BC to 1000 AD, ed. Salvatore Gaspa, Cécile Michel, & Marie-Louise Nosch (Lincoln, NE: Zea Books, 2017), pp. 346-373. -
How to Write History: Thucydides and Herodotus in the Ancient Rhetorical Tradition
How to write history: Thucydides and Herodotus in the ancient rhetorical tradition A Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Scott Kennedy, B.A., B.S. Graduate Program in Greek and Latin The Ohio State University 2018 Dissertation Committee: Anthony Kaldellis, Adviser Benjamin Acosta-Hughes Will Batstone Copyright by Scott Kennedy 2018 Abstract Modern students of Thucydides and Herodotus may find it odd to think of them as rhetoricians. Yet in the ancient world, both historians (and especially Thucydides) played an important role in rhetorical schools. They were among the favorite authors of ancient teachers of rhetoric and served as foundational pillars of the ancient curriculum, providing themes for school exercises and even for such seminal texts as Hermogenes' theoretical treatises on rhetoric. Modern scholars might never read technical rhetorical texts such as Hermogenes. They almost certainly would never turn to Hermogenes and his kind to help them understand Thucydides or Herodotus. But for our ancient intellectual predecessors, such an approach would have been unconscionable, as ancient rhetoric was the theoretical lens with which they understood and appreciated historical writings. In this dissertation, I explore the confluence of rhetoric and historiography in the ancient world through an examination of how Herodotus and Thucydides were used in ancient schools and then by later historians. Chapter 1 and 2 outline how these historians were embedded and encoded within the rhetorical curriculum. In Chapter 1, I examine how Herodotus and Thucydides entered the rhetorical curriculum and how rhetors incorporated them into the rhetorical curriculum through an examination of the surviving progymnasmata, scholia, and pedagogical myths. -
082:312 Byzantine Art Spring 2008
01:082:312 BYZANTINE ART SPRING 2019 Required Text: Robin Cormack Byzantine Art (Oxford 2018). Recommended Reading: (on the Reserve Reading shelf in the Art Library) Charles Barber Figure and Likeness: On the Limits of Representation in Byzantine Iconoclasm (Princeton 2002). Peter Brown The World of Late Antiquity (New York 1989). Jas Elsner Imperial Rome and Christian Triumph (Oxford 1998). John Haldon Byzantium in the Seventh Century: the Transformation of a Culture (Cambridge 1997). Romilly Jenkins Byzantium: The Imperial Centuries A.D. 610-1071 (New York 1969). Ernst Kitzinger Byzantine Art in the Making (London 1977). John Lowden Early Christian and Byzantine Art (London 1997). Henry Maguire Icons of Their Bodies (Princeton 2000). Thomas F. Mathews Byzantium from Antiquity to the Renaissance (Upper Saddle River 1998). Lyn Rodley Byzantine Art and Architecture (Cambridge 1994). Class Schedule: Jan. 24 Introduction and Roman Imperial Art – the Second Sophistic I Jan. 28 Roman Imperial Art – the Second Sophistic II Recommended reading: Brown 7-95. Jan. 31 Roman Imperial Art – the Second Sophistic III Recommended reading: Elsner 1-51. Feb. 4 Roman Art of the Third Century A.D. I Recommended reading: Elsner 53-87. Feb. 7 Roman Art of the Third Century A.D. II Recommended reading: Elsner 91-143. Feb. 11 Roman Art of the Tetrarchy I Recommended reading: Brown 96-135. Feb. 14 Roman Art of the Tetarchy II Recommended reading: Elsner 145-197. Feb. 18 Constantinian Art I Recommended reading: Elsner 197-235. Feb. 21 Constantinian Art II Recommended reading: Elsner 239-259. Feb. 25 Theodosian Art I Recommended reading: Cormack 1-35. -
Curriculum Vitae
1 Anthony Kaldellis ([email protected]) Department of Greek and Latin The Ohio State University 414 University Hall 230 North Oval Mall Columbus OH 43210-1319 CURRICULUM VITAE ACADEMIC POSITION 2007-present: Professor 2006-2007: Associate Professor 2001-2006: Assistant Professor, Department of Greek and Latin, The Ohio State University Other offices Routledge Classical Translations, Series Editor (2011-present). Bryn Mawr Classical Review, Editorial Board (2010-present). Arizona Center for Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Medieval Confluences: Studies in the Intellectual History and Comparative History of Ideas of the Medieval World. Editorial Board (2009-present). Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library, Greek Series. Editorial Board (2008-present). Byzantinische Zeitschrift. North American Bibliographer for Byzantine Literature (2008- present). Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. Advisory Board (2008-present). Speculum: A Journal of Medieval Studies. Review Editor for Byzantine Studies (2006-present). DEGREES Ph.D. History, University of Michigan (2001). B.A. Philosophy, B.A. History: University of Michigan (1994). PUBLICATIONS Monographs The Christian Parthenon: Classicism and Pilgrimage in Byzantine Athens (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009) – shortlisted for the Runciman Award (2010). Hellenism in Byzantium: The Transformations of Greek Identity and the Reception of the Classical Tradition (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007). Procopius of Caesarea: Tyranny, History, and Philosophy at the End of Antiquity (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004). Λέ ζ β ο ς θ α η α λ α η ο ι η θ ή Με ζ ό γ ε η ο ς θ α η ά ηε ρ ωκ α ϊ θ ή θ α η πρ ώη κ ε β σ δ α λ η η λ ή πε ρ ί ο δ ο (100 π.Χ – 600 κ .Χ.): Με ι έ η ε η ωλ θ ο η λ ωλ η θ ώλ , 2 πο ι η η η θ ώλ θ α η ζρεζθεσηη θώλ δ ο κ ώλ [Lesbos and the Eastern Mediterranean in the Roman and Early Byzantine Period (100 BC – 600 AD): A Study of Social, Political and Religious Structures] (Thessaloniki: Herodotos, 2002). -
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SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF BYZANTINE AND MODERN GREEK STUDIES 2 • 2016 JOURNAL OF BYZANTINE SCANDINAVIAN BYZANTINE AND MODERN GREEK STUDIES Albrecht Berger 9 Magical Constantinople: statues, legends, and the end of time Paolo Cesaretti 31 The Life of St Andrew the Fool by Lennart Rydén: vingt ans après Hedvig von Ehrenheim 53 Pilgrimage for dreams in Late Antiquity and Early Byzantium: continuity of the pagan ritual or development within Christian miracle tradition? Isabel Kimmelfield 97 Defining Constantinople’s Suburbs through Travel and Geography Paul Magdalino 115 The Apostolic Tradition in Constantinople Myrto Veikou 143 Space in Texts and Space as Text: A new approach to Byzantine spatial notions AnnaLinden Weller 177 Marrying the Mongol Khans: Byzantine Imperial Women and the Diplomacy of Religious Conversion in the 13th and 14th Centuries 201 Book Reviews ISSN 2002-0007 No 2 • 2016 Instructions for contributors to SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF BYZANTINE AND MODERN GREEK STUDIES SJBMGS encourages scholarly contributions within Byzantine and Mod- ern Greek philology and history. Manuscripts of articles to be considered for publication should be sent to [email protected] or Marianna Smaragdi, Centre for Lan- guages and Literature, Lund University, Box 201, 22100 Lund, Sweden. Your article will be refereed. If it is accepted for publication, you will be asked to supply a final version on e-mail. Authors will receive five copies of the journal volume. The SJBMGS is a nonprofit venture to be distributed on -
Byzantium and Greece
BYZANTIUM AND GREECE A REVIEW ARTICLE * A PHOI’OS OF ROM1LLY JENKINS, HYZAST1UM AND BYZANTINISM In two public lectures, given at the University of Cincinnati in No vember, 1962,1 Prof. Romilly Jenkins discussed the character of the By zantine State and its influence on Modern Greece. Lectures, as a rule, partake of the transient nature of the spoken word and rarely afford occasion for a review article. But Professor Jen kins’ lectures at Cincinnati must be treated as an exception. The distin guished background of the lecturer, and the high reputation of the uni versity as a center of Greek studies, are two factors that lend importance to the event. Even more interesting is the content of these lectures — espe cially Professor Jenkins’ attempt to revive the old theory of Jakob Philipp Fallmerayer. Fallmerayer’s theory concludes that the Greek people disap peared from Greece in the early Middle Ages. Their place, according to the theory, was taken by Slavs, who invaded the country between 577 and 615 A. D.a After the Slavs came large numbers of Albanians, so — to quote * This article was written on my return to the United States from a very profitable visiting research professorship, under the Fulbright Program, at the Ari stotelian University of Thessaloniki. It is my pleasant duty to express my thanks to the members of the committees that were instrumental in my appointment; to the Administration of the University and to the Faculty of Philosophy for the hospitality extended to me on all occasions; to the Board of Directors of the Institute for Balkan Studies and of the Society of Macedonian Studies; and last but not least, to the U. -
7Western Europe and Byzantium
Western Europe and Byzantium circa 500 - 1000 CE 7Andrew Reeves 7.1 CHRONOLOGY 410 CE Roman army abandons Britain 476 CE The general Odavacar deposes last Western Roman Emperor 496 CE The Frankish king Clovis converts to Christianity 500s CE Anglo-Saxons gradually take over Britain 533 CE Byzantine Empire conquers the Vandal kingdom in North Africa 535 – 554 CE Byzantine Empire conquers the Ostrogothic kingdom in Italy 560s CE Lombard invasions of Italy begin 580s CE The Franks cease keeping tax registers 597 CE Christian missionaries dispatched from Rome arrive in Britain 610 – 641 CE Heraclius is Byzantine emperor 636 CE Arab Muslims defeat the Byzantine army at the Battle of Yarmouk 670s CE Byzantine Empire begins to lose control of the Balkans to Avars, Bulgars, and Slavs 674 – 678 CE Arabs lay siege to Constantinople but are unsuccessful 711 CE Muslims from North Africa conquer Spain, end of the Visigothic kingdom 717 – 718 CE Arabs lay siege to Constantinople but are unsuccessful 717 CE Leo III becomes Byzantine emperor. Under his rule, the Iconoclast Controversy begins. 732 CE King Charles Martel of the Franks defeats a Muslim invasion of the kingdom at the Battle of Tours 751 CE The Byzantine city of Ravenna falls to the Lombards; Pepin the Short of the Franks deposes the last Merovingian king and becomes king of the Franks; King Pepin will later conquer Central Italy and donate it to the pope 750s CE Duke of Naples ceases to acknowledge the authority of the Byzantine emperor 770s CE Effective control of the city of Rome passes from Byzantium to the papacy c. -
Contestations Over Macedonian Identity, 1870–1912
VICTORIA UNIVERSITY CONTESTATIONS OVER MACEDONIAN IDENTITY, 1870–1912 by NICK ANASTASOVSKI A THESIS SUBMITTED TO VICTORIA UNIVERSITY IN FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS OF THE DEGREE OF DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY SCHOOL OF SOCIAL SCIENCES MELBOURNE, VICTORIA MAY, 2005 2 STUDENT DECLARATION I, Nick Anastasovski, declare that the thesis entitled Contestations over Macedonian Identity 1870–1912 is no more than 100,000 words in length, exclusive of tables, figures, appendices and references. This thesis contains no material that has been submitted previously, in whole or in part, for the award of any other academic degree or diploma. Except where otherwise indicated, this thesis is my own work. Nick Anastasovski May 2005 3 DEDICATION To my wife Sophie whose support and encouragement made the study possible 4 TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Abstract 9 Acknowledgments 11 Glossary of terms 13 List of maps 28 List of tables 32 List of illustrations 39 List of photographs 40 Introduction 42 Context 42 Summary 48 Chapter One: Colonisation and Islamicisation 55 1.1 Colonisation and Islamicisation 55 1.2 Religion and nationality 92 Chapter Two: Peoples and Populations 99 2.1 Peoples of Macedonia 99 Macedonians: The contested majority 99 Vlahs: Romanian or Greek, a contested minority 107 5 Greeks: Fishermen, farmers or townsfolk? 112 Turks and Albanians: The colonists 114 Gypsies and Jews: The uncontested 120 2.2 Conflicts around population data 124 Territorial boundaries 124 2.3 Population statistics 128 Ottoman Turkish population data 128 Population statistics advocated