الأربعاء، 22 نوفمبر 2023

Download PDF | The Velestino Hoard_ Casting Light on the Byzantine 'Dark Ages'-Springer International Publishing , 2019.

Download PDF |  Florin Curta, Bartłomiej Szymon Szmoniewski - The Velestino Hoard_ Casting Light on the Byzantine 'Dark Ages'-Springer International Publishing , 2019.

243 Pages





New Approaches to Byzantine History and Culture publishes high-quality scholarship on all aspects of Byzantine culture and society from the fourth to the fifteenth centuries, presenting fresh approaches to key aspects of Byzantine civilization and new studies of unexplored topics to a broad academic audience. The series is a venue for both methodologically innovative work and ground-breaking studies on new topics, seeking to engage medievalists beyond the narrow confines of Byzantine studies. The core of the series is original scholarly monographs on various aspects of Byzantine culture or society, with a particular focus on books that foster the interdisciplinarity and methodological sophistication of Byzantine studies. 




































The series editors are interested in works that combine textual and material sources, that make exemplary use of advanced methods for the analysis of those sources, and that bring theoretical practices of other fields, such as gender theory, subaltern studies, religious studies theory, anthropology, etc. to the study of Byzantine culture and society.














ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

This book has been long in the making—far longer than in the writing. As such, it is the result of many years of research on the early medieval metalwork of Eastern Europe. While both authors were heavily involved in that research, one of them ended up defending a dissertation on the topic. The other author is greatly indebted to J. Michael Padgett who has first introduced him to the pieces from the Velestino hoard now in the collection of the Princeton University Art Museum. It was that visit to the museum, in February 2007, that sparked the interest for this assemblage and initiated the research leading to this book. The support of a membership at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton has made possible both the visit to the museum and the first phase of the research project.














Many have contributed ideas, suggestions, corrections, additional pieces of evidence and bibliographical references to the book project. We owe sincere and deep gratitude to Ante Milosevic, the director of the Museum of Croatian Archaeological Monuments in Split for the photograph of the Biskupije (Pliskovo) hoard. Stergios Laitsos (Institute of History, Vienna), a native of southern Thessaly, has provided invaluable information on the topography of Velestino and its environs, as well as a number of photographs. We extend gratitude to Danijel Dzino (Macquarie University, Sydney) for his suggestions, which have greatly improved the text and brought it closer to the audience.












Introduction

In spite of a great number of recent finds, some from archaeological excavations, others as the result of metal detector activity, metalworking in the Byzantine Empire is still poorly known. The number of workshops excavated systematically remains too small, and the quantity of tools and implements (such as moulds, crucibles and dies) is still not sufficient for comparative approaches to metalworking in any period of the Byzantine history.! 


















Moreover, without any information about the archaeological context, numerous finds of artefacts pertaining to metalworking are of little, if any use in that respect.” Finds of Byzantine metalwork from outside territories that were part of the Empire at any moment in its history are of considerable importance, but it is often difficult, if not impossible to establish the manufacturing place of their origin.? Given the current state of research, the most vexing question is how to distinguish between authentically Byzantine artefacts in the so-called koiné style from imitations, reproductions and copies, several of which have been found in both Western and Eastern Europe.* Within the vast territory of the Empire, different metalworking traditions may be observed, all drawing inspiration from Antiquity.




















 While the main workshops that produced “inter-regional” types of jewellery were located in Constantinople, provincial centres, especially during the early Byzantine period, played an important role in the production and distribution not only of “pan-Byzantine” fashions, but also of strongly marked, specific local traditions.° To be sure, goldsmithing has been better studied for the early Byzantine period, especially for the sixth and seventh centuries, most likely because of a better definition of jewellery types and traces of manufacture (workshops).




























Such techniques of the koiné style as opus interrasile (also known as diatreton) have been defined through studies of the characteristics of golden jewellery, especially of crescent-shaped earrings.® Equally important has been the study of dress accessories most typical for the Early Byzantine koiné style, particularly belt buckles and fittings, made of gold, silver, bronze and brass.° Such studies have identified local variations with regional characteristics related to production.!° Moreover, recent finds of moulds, dies and crucibles confirm the idea of a local metalwork production in provincial workshops. 





























Perhaps the most interesting line of current research in that direction has been the study of the Early Byzantine technological developments related to casting using a special channel system in moulds, into which an iron wire was later inserted. That allowed the casting of artefacts with holes and hollow spaces, without the need for later drilling into a cast product. A good, early example of that technique is the set of unfinished cast fibulas with bent stem found in Drobeta-Turnu Severin, in which such iron pins have been found.!! 














The study of the Early Byzantine metalworking has also revealed the use of a great variety of metals and alloys, from gold and silver to copper alloys, particularly brass and lead and tin alloys.!* The significant role of metalworking in copper and its alloys in the Early and Middle Byzantine industry has only recently become clear.!? Analyses of dozens of metal objects dated to the Roman and Byzantine periods reveal a pattern, namely the “steady replacement of bronze by brass as the usual copper alloy through the first half of the first millennium AD, throughout the western part of the Old World, such that by the time of the Byzantine Empire and the Caliphates brass was universally prevalent”.!4 This is in sharp contrast to the impoverished picture of metalworking during the “Dark Ages” (seventh to ninth centuries).





























 Scholars usually point to the lack of finds from various parts of the Empire.!° However, it is quite clear that until the ninth century, mainly copper alloys were used for the production of casts, with very rare examples of gold or silver items.!7 Unlike the Early Byzantine metalworking, fewer sophisticated types of jewellery are known from the Middle Byzantine period, and much simpler techniques were in use.!® Finds of moulds point to casting as the principal production technique in the Byzantine Empire. In that context, the Velestino assemblage is of an exceptional importance, as nothing comparable is known for the entire Middle Byzantine period. Such a remarkable diversity of iconographic themes, technological solutions and alloys offers a unique opportunity to study the Middle Byzantine fine metalworking.



























The assemblage, however, was rarely, if ever regarded as a source for the study of Byzantine metalworking. Instead, it became a key argument in debates surrounding early medieval, pre-Christian religious beliefs, particularly the mythology of the early Slavs. Joachim Werner first linked Velestino to Slavic pagan, even shamanistic practices,!° an interpretation that had a strong influence on contemporary and later discussions of the Slavic presence in Greece.?? More recently, Nikos Chausidis systematically developed the interpretation of the Velestino plaques and placed them squarely at the centre of any discussion of the religion and mythological system of the Southern Slavs. 










































To prove his point, Chausidis employed an “autonomous research method” based on the analysis of the “material culture [of the Southern Slavs] from [their] arrival to [the] 20" century”.2! That ultimately led him to far-reaching conclusions, that were based not on contemporaneous archaeological sources, but on the chronologically (and geographically) much more distant materials.?* For example, Chausidis supported his interpretation of one of the Velestino plaques as an image of the Slavic God Perun by means of linking the image to the mention of a thunder god in the “Slavic excursus” of Procopius of Caesarea’s Wars. 






















































There is no concern for the dubious character of the earliest references to the origin and character of the (pagan) Slavic religion, and repeated references to Polabian Slavs, Western Pomeranians or even medieval Rus’ do not inspire much confidence. Chausidis seems oblivious to the now widely acknowledged fact that, in the West Slavic lands, structured forms of cult (temples, cult images/idols and the prominent roles of priests) appeared only in the late tenth century (and no earlier) as a reaction to Christianity.*+ In relation to Velestino, several other scholars have referred to the so-called Zbruch idol (a three-headed stone statue found in the nineteenth century in what is now Western Ukraine), which is dated to the ninth or tenth century.













































 Leaving aside the fact that the Zbruch idol has been associated only with the Eastern Slavs, never with the Belegezites, or any other Slavs from the Balkans, the idea has been recently put forward that the statue is in fact a nineteenth-century forgery.?° The lack of any solid evidence of early Slavic religious organization or mythology makes it very hard to accept the interpretation of the Velestino plaques as directly associated with the early Slavs.7




























A critical approach to previous interpretations of the Velestino plaques, however, is no substitute for plausible answers to the question of what exactly those plaques represent after all, and what, if any, is the ideology behind such representations. As the following chapters will amply demonstrate, the unmistakable Christian symbolism of many representations and symbols, and the multiple parallels with Byzantine iconography show that the interpretation of the Velestino plaques has until now been on a wrong path. 



























In selecting analogies, the authors of this book paid special attention to the context, and to stylistic parallels. The alternative interpretation of the historical circumstances of the hoard is therefore derived from the chronology and cultural links resulting from the archaeological and art historical analysis of the hoard’s components. Restoring Velestino to its late seventh- or early eighth-century context also means to open an until now unknown page of Middle Byzantine culture.


















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