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Byzantine Constantinople: Monuments, Topography and Everyday Life: Papers from the International Workshop held at Boğaziçi University, Istanbul, 7-10 April 1999: The Medieval Mediterranean, cartea 33

Editat de Nevra Necipoglu
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 21 aug 2001
This volume deals with the history, topography and monuments of Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire and one of the greatest urban centers ever known, throughout Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages. It contains 21 papers that emanate from an international workshop which was held at Istanbul in 1999.
Divided into eight sections, the collection addresses a variety of interconnected topics, ranging from topography to ritual and ideology, archaeology, religious and secular architecture, patronage, commercial life, social organization, women's roles, communities, urban development and planning.
Partly drawing on new archaeological and textual evidence, partly directing new questions to or reinterpreting previously available sources, the papers presented here fill important gaps in our knowledge of Constantinople and enhance our conception of the city as both a physical and social entity.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004116252
ISBN-10: 9004116257
Pagini: 368
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.81 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria The Medieval Mediterranean


Public țintă

All those interested in the Byzantine Empire, urban history, social history, medieval architecture, archaeology, the history of Late Antiquity, and the Mediterranean world, as well as western medievalists and Ottomanists.

Cuprins

Preface
List of Abbreviations
1. Introduction -- Nevra Necipoglu 1

Section 1 The Topography of Early Byzantine Constantinople
2. The Shoreline of Constantinople in the Fourth Century -- Cyril Mango 17
3. The Porticoed Street at Constantinople -- Marlia Mundell Mango 29
4. Aristocratic Oikoi in the Tenth and Eleventh Regions of Constantinople -- Paul Magdalino 53

Section 2 Imperial And Religious Ceremonies
5. Imperial and Ecclesiastical Processions in Constantinople -- Albrecht Berger 73
6. Funeral Ritual in the Parekklesion of the Chora Church -- Engin Akyurek 89

Section 3 Sacred Spaces: Problems of Method and Interpretation
7. The Findings at Kalenderhane and Problems of Method in the History of Byzantine Architecture -- Cecil L. Striker 107
8. Restoration Work at the Zeyrek Camii, 1997-1998 -- Metin Ahunbay, Zeynep Ahunbay 117
9. Architecture, Art and Komnenian Ideology at the Pantokrator Monastery -- Robert Ousterhout 133

Section 4 Imperial Monuments and Their Legacy: Textual and Iconographic Evidence
10. The Medieval Floors of the Great Palace -- Henry Maguire 153
11. Konstantin IX. - "Soliman," "Einzelkampfer," "Siegesbringer," - und die "Unbesiegbare" Theotokos -- S. Yildiz Otuken 175
12. Architectual Sculpture in Constantinople and the Influence of the Capital in Anatolia -- Sema Alpaslan 187
13. John Malaxos (16th Century) and his Collection of Antiquitates Constantinopolitanae -- Peter Schreiner 203

Section 5 New Archaeological Evidence
14. Byzantine Archaeological Findings in Istanbul during the Last Decade -- Mehmet I. Tunay 217
Section 6 Merchants, Craftsmen and the Marketplace
15. The Kommerkiarios of Constantinople -- Nicolas Oikonomides 235
16. Les artisans dans la societe de Constantinople aux VII[superscript e]-XI[superscript e] siecles -- Michel Kaplan 245
17. Women in the Marketplace of Constantinople (10th-14th Centuries) -- Angeliki E. Laiou 261

Section 7 Latins in Constantinople After 1204
18. The Urban Evolution of Latin Constantinople (1204-1261) -- David Jacoby 277
19. La societe perote aux XIV[superscript e]-XV[superscript e] siecles: autour des Demerode et des Draperio -- Michel Balard 299

Section 8 Construction Workers and Building Activity in Late Byzantine Constantinople
20. Builders and Building in Late Byzantine Constantinople -- Klaus-Peter Matschke 315
21. One, Building Activity in Constantinople under Andronikos II: The Role of Women Patrons in the Construction and Restoration of Monasteries -- Alice-Mary Talbot 329
22. Concluding Remarks -- Ihor Sevcenko 345

Index 351

Notă biografică

Nevra Necipoğlu, Ph.D. (1990) in History, Harvard University, is Associate Professor of History at Boğaziçi University. She has published numerous articles on the late Byzantine society, economy and politics, and is writing a book on Byzantine-Ottoman-Italian relations during the 14th and 15th centuries.