السبت، 15 يونيو 2024

Download PDF | (Edinburgh Byzantine Studies) Yannis Stouraitis (editor) - Identities and Ideologies in the Medieval East Roman World-Edinburgh University Press (2022).

Download PDF | (Edinburgh Byzantine Studies) Yannis Stouraitis (editor) - Identities and Ideologies in the Medieval East Roman World-Edinburgh University Press (2022).

433 Pages 




Notes on Contributors 

Panagiotis Agapitos is Gutenberg Distinguished Research Fellow at the University of Mainz and Emeritus Professor of Byzantine Literature at the University of Cyprus. His research interests focus on textual and literary criticism, with an emphasis on Byzantine rhetoric and its performance, poetics, erotic fiction and the representation of death in Byzantine literature. His most recent major publication is Livistros and Rodamne (Liverpool, 2021). Theodora Antonopoulou is Professor of Byzantine Literature at the National and Kapodistrian University of Athens. She specialises in highbrow medieval Greek literature, with an emphasis on homiletics, hymnography and hagiography, as well as in the manuscript tradition and editions of texts.  Her more recent major publications are Mercurii Grammatici Opera iambica  (2017) and, as co-author, the  Vitae et Miracula Sancti Christoduli Patmensis (2021). 
















Francesco Borri is Associate Professor at the Ca’ Foscari University of Venice. He specialises in medieval aristocracies and their identities. His most recent major publications include Alboino: Frammenti di un racconto (Rome, 2016) and ‘A Placid Island: H. P. Lovecraft’s “Ibid”’, Lovecraft Studies 12 (2018): 105–35. Leslie Brubaker is emerita Professor of Byzantine Art and Director of the Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies at the University of Birmingham. She specialises in Byzantine art, culture and gender, the cult of the Virgin and Iconoclasm, and has lately focused on urban processions and images of the poor in Byzantium. Her most recent major publication is Processions: Urban Ritual in Byzantium and Neighboring Lands, co-edited with Nancy Ševčenko (Washington, DC, forthcoming).













Jean-Claude Cheynet is emeritus Professor of Byzantine History at Sorbonne Université and honorary member of the Institut universitaire de France. He edited the Revue des études byzantines and co-edited the Studies in Sigillography. His main works are about Byzantine aristocracy – Pouvoir et contestations à Byzance (963–1210) (Paris, 1990); The Byzantine Aristocracy and its Military Function (Aldershot, 2006) – and the edition with a commentary of lead seals catalogues. John Haldon is emeritus Professor of Byzantine History & Hellenic Studies at Princeton University and Director of the Princeton University Climate Change and History Research Initiative. His research focuses on the history of the Byzantine empire; on premodern state systems and the impact of environmental stress on societal resilience; and on the production, distribution and consumption of resources in the late ancient and medieval world. His most recent major publication is The De Thematibus (‘On the Themes’) of Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus. Translated with Introductory Chapters and Notes (Liverpool, 2021). 























Johannes Koder is emeritus Professor at the University of Vienna and full member at the Austrian Academy of Sciences. He specialises in Byzantine history, historical geography, identity, everyday life and hymnography. His most recent major publication is Nomos Georgikos: Das byzantinische Landwirtschaftsgesetz. Überlegungen zur inhaltlichen und zeitlichen Einordnung. Deutsche Übersetzung (Vienna, 2020). Fotini Kondyli is Associate Professor of Byzantine Art and Archaeology at the University of Virginia. Her research interests include Byzantine and Frankish spatial practices, community-building processes and the material culture of Byzantine non-elites. She also works on cultural, economic and political networks in the eastern Mediterranean in the late Byzantine period (thirteenth to fifteenth centuries). Her most recent major publications include Rural Communities in Late Byzantium, Resilience and Vulnerability in the Northern Aegean (2022) and (as co-editor) The Byzantine Neighbourhood: Urban Space and Political Action (2022). 






















Dimitri Korobeinikov is Associate Professor at the University at Albany (New York). He specialises in Byzantine–Turkish relations from the eleventh to the end of the fifteenth century, especially in the interactions between the Muslim and Christian state institutions, the Christian–Muslim polemics, the history of the Christian communities under Muslim rule and the emergence of new Turkic states on Byzantine soil. His most important recent publications include Byzantium and the Turks in the Thirteenth Century (Oxford, 2014). Annick Peters-Custot is Full Professor in Medieval History at Nantes University. She specialises in Byzantine and Norman southern Italy, focusing on the religious and ideological circulations between western Christianity and the Byzantine world. Her most recent major publication is La réception des Pères grecs et orientaux en Italie au Moyen Âge (with Camille Rouxpetel and Bernadette Cabouret, Paris, 2020).  




































Daniel Reynolds is Senior Lecturer in Byzantine History at the Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies, University of Birmingham. He specialises in the history and archaeology of Byzantine and early Islamic Arabia-Palestine c. 330–c. 1000. His most recent major publications include ‘Death of a Patriarch: The Murder of Yuhanna ibn Jami (966) and the Question of “Melkite” Identity in Early Islamic Palestine’ and ‘History and Exegesis in the Itinerarium of Bernard the Monk (c. 867)’. Jonathan Shepard is a former University Lecturer in Russian History at Cambridge. He specialises in Byzantine diplomacy, early Rus and western Eurasia in the central Middle Ages. His most recent major publications are Viking-Age Trade: Silver, Slaves and Gotland (2020); and Political Culture in the Latin West, Byzantium and the Islamic World, c. 700–c. 1500 (2021). Alicia Simpson teaches Late Antique and Byzantine History and Classics at the American College of Greece. Her main areas of research are in Byzantine Literature and Culture and in Classical Reception Studies. She is the author of Niketas Choniates: A Historiographical Study (Oxford, 2013) and the editor of the collective volume Byzantium, 1180–1204: ‘The Sad Quarter of a Century’? (Athens, 2015).  






















Kostis Smyrlis is Associate Researcher at the Institute of Historical Research of the National Hellenic Research Foundation. He specialises in the economy, state finances and social relations of Byzantium and the medieval documents and history of Mount Athos. His major publications include La fortune des grands monastères byzantins, fin du xe - milieu du xive siècle (2006) and Actes de Vatopédi II and III (2006 and 2019).













Vlada Stanković is Professor of Byzantine Studies, and head of the Chair for Byzantine Studies at the University of Belgrade. His areas of specialisation include the period of the Komnenian dynasty, Church– state relations in the middle Byzantine period and the medieval Balkans. His most recent major publication is The Balkans and the Byzantine World before and after the Captures of Constantinople, 1204 and 1453 (Lanham, Boulder, New York and London, 2016). 






















Dionysios Stathakopoulos is Assistant Professor of Byzantine History at the University of Cyprus. He specialises in Byzantine social history, environmental history and the history of medicine and disease. His recent major publications include A Short History of the Byzantine Empire (Bloomsbury, 2014). Yannis Stouraitis is Senior Lecturer in Byzantine History at the University of Edinburgh. He specialises in Byzantine social and cultural history, focusing on the socio-ideological aspects of war, collective identifications and ideological attachments and the construction of historical memory. His most recent major publications include A Companion to the Byzantine Culture of War, ca. 300–1204 (Leiden and Boston, 2018) and, as co-editor, Migration Histories of the Medieval Afroeurasian Transition Zone. Aspects of Mobility between Africa, Asia and Europe, 300–1500 C.E. (Leiden and Boston, 2020).








 















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