Byzantine Empire
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Recent papers in Byzantine Empire
This paper traces changes and continuities in the "imperial landscape" of Constantinople after the Ottoman conquest (1453). It is shown how Mehmet II adopted an adapted the Romano-Byzantine ideology of universal rulership by reviving the... more
The news of the fall of the Byzantine Empire by the army of the Turks had given a great shock to Europeans. Latin Christians viewed the fall of Constantinople as a tragic disaster. The conquest of the Byzantine Empire by the Turks has... more
Though the modern study of Byzantine civilisation and history dates back to the late 19th century, the establishment of a definitive introductory textbook in the English language would be a slow process that would not culminate until the... more
This is a particularly dated paper from my first semester as an undergraduate history student, but it does contain valuable citations that can assist other researchers.
The Byzantine Southern Italy (876-1071) consisted of the themes of Longobardia (modern Apulia), Lucania (modern Basilicata) and Calabria, is the least studied region of the Byzantine Empire. After the Byzantine reconquest of this region... more
The late Antique mosaic of Orpheus decorated a small room, approximately 18 m2 in area, connected with two even smaller ones, in 4 m2 and the other 2 m2 in area, belonging most likely to a small funerary chapel (or tomb) discovered in the... more
The story of the translation of Ptolemy’s Geography on the eve of the birth of Modernity has often been written with a perspective that privileges events unfolding on the Western shores of the Mediterranean Sea. In the same period,... more
El imperio bizantino 1 , tomado como un ente autárquico del imperio romano de occidente, fue uno de los más longevos de la historia. Duró más de 1000 años transitando toda la Edad Tardoantigua y Edad Media, siendo trascendental para el... more
A look at the reign of the Byzantine Emperor Manuel I Komnenos
Near the present-day Poltava village of Malaya Pereschepina in Ukraine is buried our Bulgarian dear ancestor, the great Bulgarian and the Roman patrician Khan Kurt-Kubrat († 665); the founder and long-time ruler of the Caucasian... more
The modelling and visualisation of networks is based on the material in: M. Mullett, Theophylact of Ochrid. Reading the Letters of a Byzantine Archbishop. Birmingham 1997. The first graph is a visualisation of the connections between... more
In un Impero ancora scosso dalla pesante sconfitta di Adrianopoli (378 d.C.), segnato da invasioni barbariche, instabilità politico-militare e divisioni religiose interne, si delineano progressivamente le sorti delle due metà del mondo... more
The birth of a single man in the Arabian desert would go on to alter the course of history. Even down to the modern day, the rise of Islam and the subsequent conquests of the seventh century would have major ramifications, leading to the... more
377’de İstanbul önlerine gelen, 6. yüzyılda kente yerleşmeye başlayan, burada askerlik, esirlik, misafirlik, ticaret, eğitim, sığınma, siyasî rehin olmak, siyasî evlilik ve kolonizatörlük için kısa ya da uzun süreli kalan Türkler... more
Cura (con emendamenti e aggiornamenti bibliografici) della versione italiana di J.-C. CHEYNET (sous la direction de), Le monde byzantin, II. L’Empire byzantin (641-1204), Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 2006. Co-editorial... more
Considerable scholarly research has been devoted to moral, ceremonial and legal aspects of the betrothal and marriage in Byzantine Empire. Different chroniclers preserve valuable records of marriage in Byzantium according to which, we can... more
The acclamations were an important and defining part of the Byzantine court ceremony. A poetic-musical species, they were permanently present around the emperor, highlighting his authority and superiority over others, but also the divine... more
Chapter 7 as a teaser: "Food of Recent Greece" "Foods and nations" is a new series from Reaktion that explores the history-and geography-of food. Books in the series reveal the hidden history behind the food eaten today in different... more
The Battle of Yarmouk (20 August 634 CE) – Comments & Revelations I: without the Aramaeans' utilization of Islam, prophet Muhammad's religion would be blocked in Hejaz First published on 22nd August 2021 here:... more
1054 reexamines all the history of the first millennium trying to answer the question, if the indivisible Church is divided at 1054, where is the indivisible Church. Our research did not lead to any anticipated outcome. We just followed... more
This article tries to determine a potential dating of the so-called Curmsun Disc from a philological perspective. One interpretation of the inscription of the disc is: Harald “Bluetooth” Gormson, king of the Danes, Scania, Jumne in the... more
Michael F. Hendy was a noted Byzantine historian and numismatist who was active in the mid-to-late 20th century. Trained at the University of Oxford, and effectively mentored by noted historian and numismatist Philip Grierson, Hendy would... more
Résumé L’empire de Constantinople, après un siècle (969-1085) de domination sur de vastes portions de l’Orient (Cilicie, Chypre, Syrie du Nord et Djézireh), et de rayonnement au-delà jusqu’à Jérusalem, dut reconstituer sa présence... more
Collective identity in the so-called Byzantine Empire is a much-debated issue that has drawn a lot of attention over the years. The current paper attempts a critical assessment of the hitherto main lines of thinking about Byzantine... more
The book Language of Space in Byzantine Iconography is illustrated by 760 colour and 16 black and white pictures of whole scenes or details from the period of the 2nd-15th century, comprising all types of Byzantine iconography products:... more
In 1204 the Byzantines had lost their capital city. They had lost Constantinople and the attack had not come from infidels but from those who ‘bore the cross of Christ upon their shoulders’, people whom they regarded as somehow part of... more
In April 1204, the army of the Fourth Crusade captured Constantinople. For the leading princes, it was self-evident that they would install an imperator of their own in the Queen of Cities. Their choice fell on Baldwin IX/VI, count of... more
The book examines the church policy of the Roman Emperor Justinian the Great (527–565) in regard to the anti-Chalcedonians, who were inner-church group opposed to the definitions of the 4th Ecumenical Council of Chalcedon. The work covers... more