Address: School of History, Classics & Archaeology
The University of Edinburgh
William Robertson Wing
Old Medical School
Teviot Place
Edinburgh EH8 9AG
This comprehensive volume offers new insights into a seminal period of medieval Eastern Roman imp... more This comprehensive volume offers new insights into a seminal period of medieval Eastern Roman imperial history: the rule of Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos (913/945–959). Its fifteen chapters are organized around the concepts of center, province and periphery and take the reader from the splendor of Constantinople to the fringes of the empire. They examine life in the imperial city in the age of Constantine VII, the cultural revivals in Byzantium and the Carolingian West, as well as the emperor’s historiographical projects, including his historical excerpts and the famous Book of Ceremonies. Entering the sphere of the provinces, the authors explore visual messages on the coinage of Romanos I Lekapenos and Constantine Porphyrogennetos and its circulation through the provinces, provincial legal culture in the tenth-century empire, and offer a new analysis of Constantine VII’s two military harangues. Spotlights on the empire’s periphery include chapters on borderland trade with the Muslim world, a compelling new theory of the untimely deaths of the children of King Hugh of Italy, and the origins of medieval Croatia in relation to information gained from Constantine VII’s De administrando imperio. The final chapter offers intriguing insights into Constantine VII’s legacy and reception, from later middle Byzantine historiography via the Renaissance editions of the emperor’s treatises to Bavarian King Louis II’s Constantinople-inspired building projects. The volume combines leading scholars and new voices and contains survey chapters with detailed case studies.
Table of Contents
1. Plutarch’s Dialogues: Beyond the Platonic Example? / Eleni Kechagia-Ovseiko... more Table of Contents
1. Plutarch’s Dialogues: Beyond the Platonic Example? / Eleni Kechagia-Ovseiko 2. Erostrophus, a Syriac Dialogue with Socrates on the Soul / Alberto Rigolio 3. The Rhetorical Mechanisms of John Chrysostom’s On Priesthood / Alberto J. Quiroga Puertas 4. Literary Distance and Complexity in Late Antique and Early Byzantine Greek Dialogues Adversus Iudaeos / Patrick Andrist 5. Prepared for All Occasions: The Trophies of Damascus and the Bonwetsch Dialogue / Peter Van Nuffelen 6. New Wine in Old Wineskin: Byzantine Reuses of the Apocryphal Revelation Dialogue / Péter Tóth 7. Dialogical Pedagogy and the Structuring of Emotions in Liber Asceticus / Yannis Papadogiannakis 8. Anselm of Havelberg’s Controversies with the Greeks: A Moment in the Scholastic Culture of Disputation / Alex J. Novikoff 9. A Platonizing Dialogue from the Twelfth Century: The Logos of Soterichos Panteugenos / Foteini Spingou 10. The Six Dialogues by Niketas “of Maroneia”: A Contextualising Introduction / Alessandra Bucossi 11. Theodore Prodromos in the Garden of Epicurus / Eric Cullhed 12. “Let Us Not Obstruct the Possible”: Dialoguing in Medieval Georgia / Nikoloz Aleksidze 13. Embedded Dialogues and Dialogical Voices in Palaiologan Prose and Verse / Niels Gaul 14. Nikephoros Gregoras’ Philomathes and Phlorentios / Divna Manolova 15. Dramatization and Narrative in Late Byzantine Dialogues: Manuel II Palaiologos’s On Marriage and Mazaris’s Journey to Hades / Florin Leonte 16. Form and Content in the Dialogues of Gennadios Scholarios / George Karamanolis
J. Henderson and R. F. Thomas (eds), The Loeb Classical Library and Its Progeny: Proceedings of the First James Loeb Biennial Conference, Munich and Murnau 18–20 May 2017. Loeb Classical Monographs (Cambridge, Mass.), 2020
In Networks of Learning: Perspectives on Scholars in Byzantine East and Latin West, c.1000–1200, edited by S. Steckel, N. Gaul and M. Grünbart, 235–280. Byzantinische Studien und Texte, 6. Berlin–Münster: LIT Verlag, 2014.
In A Companion to the Ancient Greek Language, edited by E. J. Bakker, 69–82. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010., 2010
In Lexicologica byzantina. Beiträge zum Kolloquium zur byzantinischen Lexikographie (Bonn, 13.–15. Juli 2007), edited by E. Trapp and S. Schönauer, 163–196. Super alta perennis. Studien zur Wirkung der klassischen Antike. Göttingen: V&R unipress / Bonn University Press, 2008., 2008
Der erste Andronikos erwies sich unter jenen Kaisern, welchen auf dem Thron des byzantinischen Re... more Der erste Andronikos erwies sich unter jenen Kaisern, welchen auf dem Thron des byzantinischen Reiches nur eine kurze Zeitspanne beschieden war, als besonderer Liebling der Nymphe Echo. Geboren um 1120, tritt dieser kaiserliche Neffe und Ziehbruder eines Kaisers als eine im wahren Wortsinn changierende Gestalt des 12. Jahrhunderts vor unsere Augen. Zeitlebens war er der vornehmste Opponent seines Vetters, des Kaisers Manuel Komnenos (reg. 1143–1180); er verbrachte neun Jahre im Kerker (1154/55–Herbst 1164) und lebte nach abenteuerlicher Flucht für weitere fünfzehn Jahre in Verbannung (1164/65, 1166–1180). Als er spät im Jahr 1183 schließlich zum Basileus der Rhomäer avancierte, schreckte er vor dem Meuchelmord an seinem Neffen, dem jungen Kaiser Alexios, nicht zurück – um seinerseits kaum zwei Jahre später von Hand des konstantinopolitanischen Pöbels das wohl grausamste Ende zu finden, das jemals einem byzantinischen Autokrator zuteil wurde (September 1185): Das prophezeite AIMA der Komnenoi hatte sich erfüllt. Andronikos' kurze Tyrannis ist eingerahmt von den blutigen Ausschreitungen der Konstantinopolitaner wider die Lateiner (April 1182) und deren Nemesis, der normannischen Eroberung und Plünderung Thessalonikes (August 1185). Einige beherzte Maßnahmen seinerseits, groben Mißständen Abhilfe zu leisten, wurden bereits von den Zeitgenossen mit Lob bedacht. Die folgenden Glossen richten den Fokus allerdings vor allem auf jene Jahre, in denen odysseusgleiche Irrfahrten Andronikos bis hinauf in die Lande der Rus' (1164/65) und schließlich von Jerusalem über Damaskus und Bagdad nach Georgien führten (zwischen 1167 und 1180), ehe er in der Herrschaft der Saltuḳ-oġullari im nordöstlichen Winkel Kleinasiens, bei Koloneia (türk. Şebinkarahisar), Zuflucht fand.
This comprehensive volume offers new insights into a seminal period of medieval Eastern Roman imp... more This comprehensive volume offers new insights into a seminal period of medieval Eastern Roman imperial history: the rule of Constantine VII Porphyrogennetos (913/945–959). Its fifteen chapters are organized around the concepts of center, province and periphery and take the reader from the splendor of Constantinople to the fringes of the empire. They examine life in the imperial city in the age of Constantine VII, the cultural revivals in Byzantium and the Carolingian West, as well as the emperor’s historiographical projects, including his historical excerpts and the famous Book of Ceremonies. Entering the sphere of the provinces, the authors explore visual messages on the coinage of Romanos I Lekapenos and Constantine Porphyrogennetos and its circulation through the provinces, provincial legal culture in the tenth-century empire, and offer a new analysis of Constantine VII’s two military harangues. Spotlights on the empire’s periphery include chapters on borderland trade with the Muslim world, a compelling new theory of the untimely deaths of the children of King Hugh of Italy, and the origins of medieval Croatia in relation to information gained from Constantine VII’s De administrando imperio. The final chapter offers intriguing insights into Constantine VII’s legacy and reception, from later middle Byzantine historiography via the Renaissance editions of the emperor’s treatises to Bavarian King Louis II’s Constantinople-inspired building projects. The volume combines leading scholars and new voices and contains survey chapters with detailed case studies.
Table of Contents
1. Plutarch’s Dialogues: Beyond the Platonic Example? / Eleni Kechagia-Ovseiko... more Table of Contents
1. Plutarch’s Dialogues: Beyond the Platonic Example? / Eleni Kechagia-Ovseiko 2. Erostrophus, a Syriac Dialogue with Socrates on the Soul / Alberto Rigolio 3. The Rhetorical Mechanisms of John Chrysostom’s On Priesthood / Alberto J. Quiroga Puertas 4. Literary Distance and Complexity in Late Antique and Early Byzantine Greek Dialogues Adversus Iudaeos / Patrick Andrist 5. Prepared for All Occasions: The Trophies of Damascus and the Bonwetsch Dialogue / Peter Van Nuffelen 6. New Wine in Old Wineskin: Byzantine Reuses of the Apocryphal Revelation Dialogue / Péter Tóth 7. Dialogical Pedagogy and the Structuring of Emotions in Liber Asceticus / Yannis Papadogiannakis 8. Anselm of Havelberg’s Controversies with the Greeks: A Moment in the Scholastic Culture of Disputation / Alex J. Novikoff 9. A Platonizing Dialogue from the Twelfth Century: The Logos of Soterichos Panteugenos / Foteini Spingou 10. The Six Dialogues by Niketas “of Maroneia”: A Contextualising Introduction / Alessandra Bucossi 11. Theodore Prodromos in the Garden of Epicurus / Eric Cullhed 12. “Let Us Not Obstruct the Possible”: Dialoguing in Medieval Georgia / Nikoloz Aleksidze 13. Embedded Dialogues and Dialogical Voices in Palaiologan Prose and Verse / Niels Gaul 14. Nikephoros Gregoras’ Philomathes and Phlorentios / Divna Manolova 15. Dramatization and Narrative in Late Byzantine Dialogues: Manuel II Palaiologos’s On Marriage and Mazaris’s Journey to Hades / Florin Leonte 16. Form and Content in the Dialogues of Gennadios Scholarios / George Karamanolis
J. Henderson and R. F. Thomas (eds), The Loeb Classical Library and Its Progeny: Proceedings of the First James Loeb Biennial Conference, Munich and Murnau 18–20 May 2017. Loeb Classical Monographs (Cambridge, Mass.), 2020
In Networks of Learning: Perspectives on Scholars in Byzantine East and Latin West, c.1000–1200, edited by S. Steckel, N. Gaul and M. Grünbart, 235–280. Byzantinische Studien und Texte, 6. Berlin–Münster: LIT Verlag, 2014.
In A Companion to the Ancient Greek Language, edited by E. J. Bakker, 69–82. Blackwell Companions to the Ancient World. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell, 2010., 2010
In Lexicologica byzantina. Beiträge zum Kolloquium zur byzantinischen Lexikographie (Bonn, 13.–15. Juli 2007), edited by E. Trapp and S. Schönauer, 163–196. Super alta perennis. Studien zur Wirkung der klassischen Antike. Göttingen: V&R unipress / Bonn University Press, 2008., 2008
Der erste Andronikos erwies sich unter jenen Kaisern, welchen auf dem Thron des byzantinischen Re... more Der erste Andronikos erwies sich unter jenen Kaisern, welchen auf dem Thron des byzantinischen Reiches nur eine kurze Zeitspanne beschieden war, als besonderer Liebling der Nymphe Echo. Geboren um 1120, tritt dieser kaiserliche Neffe und Ziehbruder eines Kaisers als eine im wahren Wortsinn changierende Gestalt des 12. Jahrhunderts vor unsere Augen. Zeitlebens war er der vornehmste Opponent seines Vetters, des Kaisers Manuel Komnenos (reg. 1143–1180); er verbrachte neun Jahre im Kerker (1154/55–Herbst 1164) und lebte nach abenteuerlicher Flucht für weitere fünfzehn Jahre in Verbannung (1164/65, 1166–1180). Als er spät im Jahr 1183 schließlich zum Basileus der Rhomäer avancierte, schreckte er vor dem Meuchelmord an seinem Neffen, dem jungen Kaiser Alexios, nicht zurück – um seinerseits kaum zwei Jahre später von Hand des konstantinopolitanischen Pöbels das wohl grausamste Ende zu finden, das jemals einem byzantinischen Autokrator zuteil wurde (September 1185): Das prophezeite AIMA der Komnenoi hatte sich erfüllt. Andronikos' kurze Tyrannis ist eingerahmt von den blutigen Ausschreitungen der Konstantinopolitaner wider die Lateiner (April 1182) und deren Nemesis, der normannischen Eroberung und Plünderung Thessalonikes (August 1185). Einige beherzte Maßnahmen seinerseits, groben Mißständen Abhilfe zu leisten, wurden bereits von den Zeitgenossen mit Lob bedacht. Die folgenden Glossen richten den Fokus allerdings vor allem auf jene Jahre, in denen odysseusgleiche Irrfahrten Andronikos bis hinauf in die Lande der Rus' (1164/65) und schließlich von Jerusalem über Damaskus und Bagdad nach Georgien führten (zwischen 1167 und 1180), ehe er in der Herrschaft der Saltuḳ-oġullari im nordöstlichen Winkel Kleinasiens, bei Koloneia (türk. Şebinkarahisar), Zuflucht fand.
It is our great pleasure to publish this booklet of abstracts of the 2nd Annual Edinburgh Interna... more It is our great pleasure to publish this booklet of abstracts of the 2nd Annual Edinburgh International Graduate Byzantine Conference entitled “Reception, Appropriation and Innovation: Byzantium between the Christian and Islamic Worlds”, taking place at the University of Edinburgh from 30 November-1 December 2018. We publish here the 28 abstracts submitted by all of our speakers, including our invited, keynote speakers, all of whom we thank for their commitment to making this conference a success – and their contribution towards this end shines through on each of the following pages. From the beginning this conference has been the fruit of collaborative efforts amongst individual scholars and institutions, as well, from many different countries. First, within the University of Edinburgh itself, the conference marks an important development in interdisciplinary collaboration amongst schools and colleges, as it is co-organized by students from the School of History, Classics and Archaeology together with the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies. Moreover, we are very happy to have welcomed here scholars from all over the world to present their research from 20 different institutions in several countries: France, Greece, Turkey, Finland, UK, USA, Austria, Egypt, Italy, Denmark and Israel. Finally, this fruitful and multi-faceted collaboration would not have been possible without the generous support of the Late Antique and Byzantine Studies Research Group of the School of History, Classics and Archaeology together with the Alwaleed Centre of the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, both of the University of Edinburgh, as well as generous support from the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies. This booklet of abstracts has a twofold aim: 1) to situate this conference within the wider research context of the University of Edinburgh, highlighting the interdisciplinary work being conducted here with the hope of establishing these interdepartmental relations on solid ground for years to come, and 2) to make the fruits of these joint efforts readily available to a wider, global audience, both within academia and beyond, by means of various media and open-access publishing.
23 International Congress of Byzantine Studies – Belgrade
A Round Table convened by Andrea M. CUO... more 23 International Congress of Byzantine Studies – Belgrade A Round Table convened by Andrea M. CUOMO (Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna) and Niels GAUL (The University of Edinburgh)
This Round Table will look into methodological issues concerning historical sociolinguistics (HSL) as a discipline, and illustrate how to conduct HSL inquiries by discussing case studies from the corpus of documentary and literary texts written in Medieval Greek.
A Round Table, convened by Andrea M. CUOMO (Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna) and Niels GAUL ... more A Round Table, convened by Andrea M. CUOMO (Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna) and Niels GAUL (The University of Edinburgh) – 23rd International Congress of Byzantine Studies – Belgrade 2016
Our Round Table will look into methodological issues concerning historical sociolinguistics (HSL) as a discipline, and illustrate how to conduct HSL inquiries by discussing case studies from the corpus of documentary and literary texts written in Medieval Greek.
The symposium aims to explore how public performances of classicising learning (however defined i... more The symposium aims to explore how public performances of classicising learning (however defined in each culture) influenced and served imperial or state power in premodern political systems across Eurasia and North Africa.
Call for ‘New Voices’ papers and communications – deadline: 1 December 2017
The Post-1204 Byzant... more Call for ‘New Voices’ papers and communications – deadline: 1 December 2017
The Post-1204 Byzantine World: New Approaches and Novel Directions
The 2018 symposium will be dedicated to the later Byzantine world, taking its starting point from the cataclysmic events of 1204.
Especially in recent years, the late Byzantine period has seen an increasing amount of exciting research activity: from continuing Grundlagenforschung (palaeography, critical editions, translations and commentaries) via the reevaluation of key social, political, and economic practices to the application of new methods such as network studies or sociolinguistics, our understanding of the society and politics of the final two hundred and fifty years of Roman rule in the eastern Mediterranean have much increased. If down to the late 1990s Laskarid and Palaiologan Byzantium was often still perceived as one of the (many) Cinderellas of Byzantine Studies, this is clearly no longer the case. Wherever one looks these days, exciting postgraduate projects are under way; in an increasing number of universities, Byzantine Studies is taught by colleagues with expertise in the later Byzantine period.
The 51st Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies seeks to take stock of these novel approaches to the post-1204 Byzantine world by bringing together established researchers, new voices, and open communications on all aspects of this newly polycentric world that stretched from Constantinople to Mystras and from Arta to Trebizond: we will explore the functioning of late Byzantine politics – the interaction of emperors and rulers with aristocratic, ecclesiastical, urban elites and the demos – look at the cultural, religious, and literary life in the various post-1204 polities from various angles, and explore the fragile position of the dwindling Eastern Roman polities in their wider Mediterranean context, from the Italian powers via the Balkans to the Mamluks, Ottomans, and Mongols.
The 49th Spring Symposium of the Society
for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies
INSCRIBING TEXT... more The 49th Spring Symposium of the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies INSCRIBING TEXTS IN BYZANTIUM: CONTINUITIES AND TRANSFORMATIONS 18-20 March 2016, Exeter College, Oxford
In spite of the striking abundance of extant primary material – over 4000 Greek texts produced in the period between the sixth and fifteenth centuries – Byzantine Epigraphy remains largely uncharted territory, with a reputation for being elusive and esoteric that obstinately persists. References to inscriptions in our texts show how ubiquitous and deeply engrained the epigraphic habit was in Byzantine society, and underscore the significance of epigraphy as an auxiliary discipline. The growing interest in material culture, including inscriptions, has opened new avenues of research and led to various explorations in the field of epigraphy, but what is urgently needed is a synthetic approach that incorporates literacy, built environment, social and political contexts, and human agency. The SPBS Symposium 2016 has invited specialists in the field to examine diverse epigraphic material in order to trace individual epigraphic habits, and outline overall inscriptional traditions. In addition to the customary format of panel papers and shorter communications, the Symposium will organise a round table, whose participants will lead a debate on the topics presented in the panel papers, and discuss the methodological questions of collection, presentation and interpretation of Byzantine inscriptional material.
This one day and a half conference combines a symposium and a workshop.
The aim is to
examine an... more This one day and a half conference combines a symposium and a workshop. The aim is to examine and contextualise the artistic and cultural production of the geopolitical centres that were controlled by or in contact with the late Byzantine Empire, such as the Adriatic and Balkan regions, the major islands of Cyprus and Crete, and the regions surrounding the cities of Constantinople, Thessaloniki, and Mystras. This conference will explore the many intellectual implications that are encoded in the innovative artistic production of the Palaiologan Era often simplified by a rigid understanding of what is Byzantine and what is not. In its last centuries, the political entity of the Empire of the Romaioi released cultural and artistic energies migrating towards new frontiers of intellectual achievements. The intent is to counter-balance the innovation of these works of art with the notion of decline and the narrative of decay frequently acknowledged for this period; and to promote an understanding of transformation where previous cultural heritages were integrated into new socio-political orders. The Symposium – hosted on the afternoon of the 24 and the morning of the 25 February - will bring together established scholars, early-career scholars, and postgraduate students. Three keynotes will provide the methodological framework for the discussion; while the selected papers will focus solely on the visual expressions and cultural trajectories of the artworks produced during the late Palaiologan Era. The Workshop, hosted on the afternoon of the 25 February, will offer the opportunity to further the discussion in a more informal setting and for a selected number of Master students to interact and offer brief presentations. Postgraduate students and early-career scholars are invited to submit proposals for twentyminute papers on art and architecture history, material culture, visual aspects of palaeography and codicology, and gender studies. Topics may include but are not limited to: - Gift exchange in view of diplomatic missions or dynastic marriages both within the Empire and with its neighbours - Visual evidence of the interaction between the Emperor and the Patriarch - Innovations in the visual agenda of the Palaiologan dynasty - Aspects of religious iconography and visual representations of theological controversies, i.e. Hesychasm - Artistic patronage and manuscript production as the outcome of dynastic and institutional interactions - Visual and material production as the outcome of political and social circumstances, i.e. the Zealot uprising or the Unionist policy - Evidence of artistic exchanges in the depictions of women, men, and children during the Palaiologan Era
Uploads
Books by Niels Gaul
1. Plutarch’s Dialogues: Beyond the Platonic Example? / Eleni Kechagia-Ovseiko
2. Erostrophus, a Syriac Dialogue with Socrates on the Soul / Alberto Rigolio
3. The Rhetorical Mechanisms of John Chrysostom’s On Priesthood / Alberto J. Quiroga Puertas
4. Literary Distance and Complexity in Late Antique and Early Byzantine Greek Dialogues Adversus Iudaeos / Patrick Andrist
5. Prepared for All Occasions: The Trophies of Damascus and the Bonwetsch Dialogue / Peter Van Nuffelen
6. New Wine in Old Wineskin: Byzantine Reuses of the Apocryphal Revelation Dialogue / Péter Tóth
7. Dialogical Pedagogy and the Structuring of Emotions in Liber Asceticus / Yannis Papadogiannakis
8. Anselm of Havelberg’s Controversies with the Greeks: A Moment in the Scholastic Culture of Disputation / Alex J. Novikoff
9. A Platonizing Dialogue from the Twelfth Century: The Logos of Soterichos Panteugenos / Foteini Spingou
10. The Six Dialogues by Niketas “of Maroneia”: A Contextualising Introduction / Alessandra Bucossi
11. Theodore Prodromos in the Garden of Epicurus / Eric Cullhed
12. “Let Us Not Obstruct the Possible”: Dialoguing in Medieval Georgia / Nikoloz Aleksidze
13. Embedded Dialogues and Dialogical Voices in Palaiologan Prose and Verse / Niels Gaul
14. Nikephoros Gregoras’ Philomathes and Phlorentios / Divna Manolova
15. Dramatization and Narrative in Late Byzantine Dialogues: Manuel II Palaiologos’s On Marriage and Mazaris’s Journey to Hades / Florin Leonte
16. Form and Content in the Dialogues of Gennadios Scholarios / George Karamanolis
Articles & Book Chapters by Niels Gaul
Book Reviews by Niels Gaul
1. Plutarch’s Dialogues: Beyond the Platonic Example? / Eleni Kechagia-Ovseiko
2. Erostrophus, a Syriac Dialogue with Socrates on the Soul / Alberto Rigolio
3. The Rhetorical Mechanisms of John Chrysostom’s On Priesthood / Alberto J. Quiroga Puertas
4. Literary Distance and Complexity in Late Antique and Early Byzantine Greek Dialogues Adversus Iudaeos / Patrick Andrist
5. Prepared for All Occasions: The Trophies of Damascus and the Bonwetsch Dialogue / Peter Van Nuffelen
6. New Wine in Old Wineskin: Byzantine Reuses of the Apocryphal Revelation Dialogue / Péter Tóth
7. Dialogical Pedagogy and the Structuring of Emotions in Liber Asceticus / Yannis Papadogiannakis
8. Anselm of Havelberg’s Controversies with the Greeks: A Moment in the Scholastic Culture of Disputation / Alex J. Novikoff
9. A Platonizing Dialogue from the Twelfth Century: The Logos of Soterichos Panteugenos / Foteini Spingou
10. The Six Dialogues by Niketas “of Maroneia”: A Contextualising Introduction / Alessandra Bucossi
11. Theodore Prodromos in the Garden of Epicurus / Eric Cullhed
12. “Let Us Not Obstruct the Possible”: Dialoguing in Medieval Georgia / Nikoloz Aleksidze
13. Embedded Dialogues and Dialogical Voices in Palaiologan Prose and Verse / Niels Gaul
14. Nikephoros Gregoras’ Philomathes and Phlorentios / Divna Manolova
15. Dramatization and Narrative in Late Byzantine Dialogues: Manuel II Palaiologos’s On Marriage and Mazaris’s Journey to Hades / Florin Leonte
16. Form and Content in the Dialogues of Gennadios Scholarios / George Karamanolis
From the beginning this conference has been the fruit of collaborative efforts amongst individual scholars and institutions, as well, from many different countries. First, within the University of Edinburgh itself, the conference marks an important development in interdisciplinary collaboration amongst schools and colleges, as it is co-organized by students from the School of History, Classics and Archaeology together with the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies.
Moreover, we are very happy to have welcomed here scholars from all over the world to present their research from 20 different institutions in several countries: France, Greece, Turkey, Finland, UK, USA, Austria, Egypt, Italy, Denmark and Israel. Finally, this fruitful and multi-faceted collaboration would not have been possible without the generous support of the Late Antique and Byzantine Studies Research Group of the School of History, Classics and Archaeology together with the Alwaleed Centre of the Department of Islamic and Middle Eastern Studies, both of the University of Edinburgh, as well as generous support from the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies.
This booklet of abstracts has a twofold aim: 1) to situate this conference within the wider research context of the University of Edinburgh, highlighting the interdisciplinary work being conducted here with the hope of establishing these interdepartmental relations on solid ground for years to come, and 2) to make the fruits of these joint efforts readily available to a wider, global audience, both within academia and beyond, by means of various media and open-access publishing.
A Round Table convened by Andrea M. CUOMO (Austrian Academy of Sciences, Vienna) and Niels GAUL (The University of Edinburgh)
Thursday, August 25, 2016 – 5pm [hier link to the program, please: http://byz2016.rs/program-2/?lang=en]
This Round Table will look into methodological issues concerning historical sociolinguistics (HSL) as a discipline, and illustrate how to conduct HSL inquiries by discussing case studies from the corpus of documentary and literary texts written in Medieval Greek.
Our Round Table will look into methodological issues concerning historical sociolinguistics (HSL) as a discipline, and illustrate how to conduct HSL inquiries by discussing case studies from the corpus of documentary and literary texts written in Medieval Greek.
Registration will remain open until 06/12/2019
For further information see: http://paixue.shca.ed.ac.uk/node/12
The Post-1204 Byzantine World: New Approaches and Novel Directions
The 2018 symposium will be dedicated to the later Byzantine world, taking its starting point from the cataclysmic events of 1204.
Especially in recent years, the late Byzantine period has seen an increasing amount of exciting research activity: from continuing Grundlagenforschung (palaeography, critical editions, translations and commentaries) via the reevaluation of key social, political, and economic practices to the application of new methods such as network studies or sociolinguistics, our understanding of the society and politics of the final two hundred and fifty years of Roman rule in the eastern Mediterranean have much increased. If down to the late 1990s Laskarid and Palaiologan Byzantium was often still perceived as one of the (many) Cinderellas of Byzantine Studies, this is clearly no longer the case. Wherever one looks these days, exciting postgraduate projects are under way; in an increasing number of universities, Byzantine Studies is taught by colleagues with expertise in the later Byzantine period.
The 51st Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies seeks to take stock of these novel approaches to the post-1204 Byzantine world by bringing together established researchers, new voices, and open communications on all aspects of this newly polycentric world that stretched from Constantinople to Mystras and from Arta to Trebizond: we will explore the functioning of late Byzantine politics – the interaction of emperors and rulers with aristocratic, ecclesiastical, urban elites and the demos – look at the cultural, religious, and literary life in the various post-1204 polities from various angles, and explore the fragile position of the dwindling Eastern Roman polities in their wider Mediterranean context, from the Italian powers via the Balkans to the Mamluks, Ottomans, and Mongols.
for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies
INSCRIBING TEXTS
IN BYZANTIUM:
CONTINUITIES AND TRANSFORMATIONS
18-20 March 2016, Exeter College, Oxford
In spite of the striking abundance of extant primary material – over 4000 Greek texts produced in the period between the sixth and fifteenth centuries – Byzantine Epigraphy remains largely uncharted territory, with a reputation for being elusive and esoteric that obstinately persists. References to inscriptions in our texts show how ubiquitous and deeply engrained the epigraphic habit was in Byzantine society, and underscore the significance of epigraphy as an auxiliary discipline. The growing interest in material culture, including inscriptions, has opened new avenues of research and led to various explorations in the field of epigraphy, but what is urgently needed is a synthetic approach that incorporates literacy, built environment, social and political contexts, and human agency. The SPBS Symposium 2016 has invited specialists in the field to examine diverse epigraphic material in order to trace individual epigraphic habits, and outline overall inscriptional traditions. In addition to the customary format of panel papers and shorter communications, the Symposium will organise a round table, whose participants will lead a debate on the topics presented in the panel papers, and discuss the methodological questions of collection, presentation and interpretation of Byzantine inscriptional material.
The aim is to
examine and contextualise the artistic and cultural production of the geopolitical centres
that were controlled by or in contact with the late Byzantine Empire, such as the Adriatic
and Balkan regions, the major islands of Cyprus and Crete, and the regions surrounding the
cities of Constantinople, Thessaloniki, and Mystras. This conference will explore the many
intellectual implications that are encoded in the innovative artistic production of the
Palaiologan Era often simplified by a rigid understanding of what is Byzantine and what is
not.
In its last centuries, the political entity of the Empire of the Romaioi released cultural and
artistic energies migrating towards new frontiers of intellectual achievements. The intent is
to counter-balance the innovation of these works of art with the notion of decline and the
narrative of decay frequently acknowledged for this period; and to promote an
understanding of transformation where previous cultural heritages were integrated into
new socio-political orders.
The Symposium – hosted on the afternoon of the 24 and the morning of the 25 February -
will bring together established scholars, early-career scholars, and postgraduate students.
Three keynotes will provide the methodological framework for the discussion; while the
selected papers will focus solely on the visual expressions and cultural trajectories of the
artworks produced during the late Palaiologan Era.
The Workshop, hosted on the afternoon of the 25 February, will offer the opportunity to
further the discussion in a more informal setting and for a selected number of Master
students to interact and offer brief presentations.
Postgraduate students and early-career scholars are invited to submit proposals for twentyminute
papers on art and architecture history, material culture, visual aspects of
palaeography and codicology, and gender studies.
Topics may include but are not limited to:
- Gift exchange in view of diplomatic missions or dynastic marriages both within the
Empire and with its neighbours
- Visual evidence of the interaction between the Emperor and the Patriarch
- Innovations in the visual agenda of the Palaiologan dynasty
- Aspects of religious iconography and visual representations of theological
controversies, i.e. Hesychasm
- Artistic patronage and manuscript production as the outcome of dynastic and
institutional interactions
- Visual and material production as the outcome of political and social
circumstances, i.e. the Zealot uprising or the Unionist policy
- Evidence of artistic exchanges in the depictions of women, men, and children
during the Palaiologan Era