Byzantine studies


Byzantine studies is an interdisciplinary branch of the humanities that addresses the history, culture, demography, dress, religion/theology, art, literature/epigraphy, music, science, economy, coinage and politics of the Eastern Roman Empire. The discipline's founder in Germany is considered to be the philologist Hieronymus Wolf, a Renaissance Humanist. He gave the name "Byzantine" to the Eastern Roman Empire that continued after the Western Roman Empire collapsed in 476 AD. About 100 years after the final conquest of Constantinople by the Ottomans, Wolf began to collect, edit, and translate the writings of Byzantine philosophers. Other 16th-century humanists introduced Byzantine studies to Holland and Italy. The subject may also be called Byzantinology or Byzantology, although these terms are usually found in English translations of original non-English sources. A scholar of Byzantine studies is called a Byzantinist.

Structure

Definition

Byzantine studies is the discipline that addresses the history and culture of Byzantium. Thus the unity of the object of investigation stands in contrast to the diversity of approaches that may be applied to it. - There were already "Byzantine" studies in the high medieval Byzantine Empire. In the later Middle Ages, the interest in Byzantium was carried on by Italian humanism, and it expanded in the 17th century throughout Europe and Russia. The late 19th and early 20th centuries brought the formation of Byzantine studies as an independent discipline.

Byzantium

Greek-Hellenistic culture, Roman state traditions, Oriental influence and Christian faith, together with a relative unity of language and culture, constitute medieval Byzantium. The starting point of Byzantine history is usually taken to be the reign of Constantine the Great and the foundation of Constantinople. The "East Roman" era of Byzantium begins at the latest with the division of the Roman Empire into a Western Roman Empire and an Eastern Roman Empire. This "Early Byzantine" period lasts until approximately 641 AD. Emperor Justinian I reconquered Italy, north Africa, and southern Spain, but after the expansion of Islam a reorganized Byzantium, now based on administration by Themes, was limited to the Greek-speaking regions of the Balkan peninsula, Asia Minor, and southern Italy; Latin was abandoned as the language of officialdom. This may be perceived as the "end of antiquity," and the beginning of the "Middle Byzantine" era.
This was also the era of Iconoclasm and of the origin of the Holy Roman Empire. Under the Macedonian Dynasty Byzantium regained power against the Islamic and Bulgarian states, but the death of Emperor Basil II marked a turning point, with Byzantine power in Asia Minor and southern Italy suffering from the Battle of Manzikert and the rise of the Normans, respectively. A certain stability was achieved under the Comnenian Dynasty, at least until the Battle of Myriokephalon. Internal conflicts facilitated the sack of Constantinople by the Crusaders and the establishment of Latin states in the south Balkans.
The late period of the Byzantine Empire as a small state begins with the Palaiologos dynasty, which was particularly threatened by the advances of the Ottoman Empire and the economic influence of Venice and Genoa. An empire weakened in part through civil war suffered a severe blow when Thessalonica was captured in 1430, and finally fell to the Ottomans. The Empire of Trebizond, founded in the wake of the Fourth Crusade, also forms a part of Byzantine history.

Languages

It is possible to distinguish between three levels of speech: Atticism, Koine, and Demotic. Thus a certain diglossia between spoken Greek and written, classical Greek may be discerned.
Major genres of Byzantine literature include historiography, hagiography ; hagiographic collections, epistolography, rhetoric, and poetry. From the Byzantine administration, broadly construed, we have works such as description of peoples and cities, accounts of court ceremonies, and lists of precedence. Technical literature is represented, for example, by texts on military strategy. Collections of civil and canon law are preserved, as well as documents and acta. Some texts in the demotic are also preserved.

Identity

There are currently three main schools of thought on medieval eastern Roman identity in modern Byzantine scholarship: 1) a potentially preponderant view that considers "Romanity" the mode of self-identification of the subjects of a multi-ethnic empire, in which the elite did not self-identify as Greek and the average subject considered him/herself as "Roman", 2) a school of thought that developed largely under the influence of modern Greek nationalism, treating Romanness as the medieval manifestation of a perennial Greek national identity, 3) a line of thought recently promulgated by Anthony Kaldellis arguing that Eastern Roman identity was a pre-modern national identity.

Auxiliary sciences

Modes of transmission

Modes of transmission entails the study of texts that are preserved primarily on papyrus, parchment or paper, in addition to inscriptions, coins, and medals. The papyrus rolls of antiquity are quickly replaced by the parchment codices of the Middle Ages, while paper arrives in the 9th century via the Arabs and Chinese.

Diplomatics

entails the study of Byzantine documents. Documents may be classified according to their producers as secular or sacred, or according to their means of preservation. Imperial documents may be divided into those that promulgate law, present decisions regarding specific cases, documents of foreign policy (types: ''sakrai, grammata, basilikon, chrysobullos horismos, chrysobullon sigillon, prokuratorikon chrysobullontransl\|grc|prostagmatatransl\|grc|gramma, homologiatransl\|grc|diatheketransl\|grc|aphorismostransl\|grc|paraitesistransl\|grc|praxistransl\|grc|synodiketransl\|grc|hypotyposistransl\|grc|tomostransl\|grc|chrysobullos logos
Sigillography and palaeography
Specific subsets of diplomatics entail sigillography, the study of seals, and palaeography, the study of scripts.

Epigraphy

Byzantine epigraphy entails the study of various stone, metal, ivory, mosaic, enamel, and paint inscriptions.

Numismatics

Byzantine numismatics entails the study of imperial coins and mints. Building on the gold standard of Late Antiquity, the Byzantine monetary system was, until the middle of the 14th century, based on a gold standard, and included silver, bronze, and copper coins. With the economic and political decline of the late period, the gold standard was abandoned in the final century of Byzantine history, and replaced by a silver-based system.

Metrology

Byzantine metrology entails the study of Byzantine weights and measures. A great number of measures of length were used, including modified forms of the Greek and Roman units of the finger, kondylos, anticheir, palaiste, dichas, spithame, pechys, pace, fathom, schoenus, plethron, mile, allage, and an average day's journey. Measure of volume included: litra, tagarion, pinakion, modios, and those of surface area modios, megalos modios and zeugarion. Measures for water and wine were called megarikon, metron and tetartion. Measures of weight were krithokokkon, sitokokkon, gramma, obolos, drachme, ungia, litra, kentenarion, gomarion and pesa.

Chronology

Byzantine chronology entails the study of the computation of time. According to the various Byzantine calendar systems, Year 1 AD. = Year 754 ab urbe condita = the first year of the 195th Olympiad = Year 49 of the Antiochean era = Year 5493 of the Alexandrine era = Year 312 of the Seleucid era = Year 5509 from the formation of the world. The Byzantine year began with 1 September, believed to be the Day of Creation, e.g., 1 January through 31 August belonged to the year 5508, 1 September through 31 December to the year 5509. Dating according to indiction remained standard.

Organizations

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