Efthymios Rizos | Hellenic Ministry of Culture & Sports (original) (raw)
Books by Efthymios Rizos
by Efthymios Rizos, Jean-Michel Spieser, Carolyn Snively, John Bintliff, Sylvie Bletry, ASSENAT Martine, Elif Keser Kayaalp, Javier Martínez Jiménez, Günder Varinlioğlu, Martin Gussone, Jim Crow, Albrecht Berger, Georgios Deligiannakis, Knut Ødegård, Emanuele E . Intagliata, David Hill, and Håkon Roland
Reviewed by: N. Burkhardt, Historische Zeitschrift, 2019, Vol.309(1), pp.165-168 P. Maranzana, ... more Reviewed by:
N. Burkhardt, Historische Zeitschrift, 2019, Vol.309(1), pp.165-168
P. Maranzana, American Journal of Archaeology, 4/2019, Vol.123(2)
https://www.ajaonline.org/book-review/3856
E. Zanini, Medioevo Greco 19, 2019, 453-455
https://www.academia.edu/41221431/Reviev_of_Efthymios_Rizos_ed._New_Cities_in_Late_Antiquity._Documents_and_Archaeology_Turnhout_2017
M. Sartre, in Syria 96 (2019)
https://journals.openedition.org/syria/8971
Hagiography and Cult of Saints by Efthymios Rizos
by The Cult of Saints, Efthymios Rizos, Sergey Minov, Nikoloz Aleksidze, Paweł Nowakowski, Robert Wiśniewski, Theo Maarten van Lint, Matthieu Pignot, Marta Szada, Arietta Papaconstantinou, Julia Doroszewska, and Marijana Vukovic
A part of our database material is now available for consultation. Please, visit our website and ... more A part of our database material is now available for consultation. Please, visit our website and use the database!
L. Lavan (ed.), Burial and Memorial in Late Antiquity. Late Antique Archaeology 13/1, 2024
This paper explores the connection between the burial habits of the Christian lay elite and the o... more This paper explores the connection between the burial habits of the Christian lay elite and the origins of the use of partitioned and transferred relics of saints. On the basis of textual and archaeological evidence, it is argued that the mobility of relics was linked to the desire of powerful Christians to have their dead buried near the saints (ad sanctos). Perhaps emulating the model of the mausoleum of Constantine the Great, the earliest known translations of relics were conducted for the consecration of private funerary shrines in 4th c. Anatolia and Constantinople. Privately sponsored by lay aristocrats in collaboration with bishops and monks, these early translations were opposed by imperial legislation and parts of the Christian community, but they gradually contributed to normalising this controversial practice, until it became an established aspect of public religion by the 5th c.
Analecta Bollandiana, 2021
Journal is published twice a year (in June and December) in issues of 240 pages each. La Revue pa... more Journal is published twice a year (in June and December) in issues of 240 pages each. La Revue paraît deux fois par an (en juin et en décembre); chaque livraison compte 240 pages.
Paperback Edition: ISBN 978-1-78925-007-7 Digital Edition: ISBN 978-1-78925-008-4 (epub) AN OFFPR... more Paperback Edition: ISBN 978-1-78925-007-7 Digital Edition: ISBN 978-1-78925-008-4 (epub) AN OFFPRINT FROM
Ivan Bugarski, Orsolya Heinrich-Tamáska, Vujadin Ivanišević, Daniel Syrbe (eds.), GrenzÜbergänge. Late Roman, Early Christian, Early Byzantine as categories in historical-archaeological research on the middle Danube.
Analecta Bollandiana, 2020
Journal is published twice a year (in June and December) in issues of 240 pages each. La Revue pa... more Journal is published twice a year (in June and December) in issues of 240 pages each. La Revue paraît deux fois par an (en juin et en décembre); chaque livraison compte 240 pages.
Analecta Bollandiana, 138, p. 86-92, 2020
[résumé français ci-dessous] This article offers the edition of a parchment scrap found in the 19... more [résumé français ci-dessous] This article offers the edition of a parchment scrap found in the 1960s in Gebel Adda (Egyptian Nubia) and now kept in the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto. The scrap, inscribed on both sides, probably originates from a codex, which can be dated to the 10th/11th century on palaeographic grounds. It preserves fragments of a liturgical calendar in Greek, giving names of saints and days of a month. The legible names include: Athenogenes (of Pedachthoe), Euphemia (of Chalcedon), Tryphon, and Menelaus. All of them were martyrs venerated in July according to various Christian calendars, including the Martyrologium Hieronymianum, the Synaxarium of Constantinople, and the Copto-Arabic Synaxarium. The absolute dates of these feasts on the Gebel Adda scrap cannot be identified with certainty, but their sequence is consistent with the other calendars, thus attesting to the fact that the liturgical calendar used in Christian Nubia did not differ essentially from those of other parts of the Christian world.
Cet article propose l’édition d’un fragment de parchemin trouvé dans les années 1960 au Gebel Adda (Nubie égyptienne) et aujourd’hui conservé au Royal Ontario Museum, à Toronto. Le fragment, copié sur les deux faces, provient probablement d’un codex datable des Xe/XIe s., sur base de la paléographie. Il offre un fragment de calendrier liturgique en grec, donnant les noms de saints et les jours d’un mois. Les noms lisibles comprennent Athénogène (de Pédachthoé), Euphémie (de Chalcédoine), Tryphon et Ménélas. Tous étaient des martyrs vénérés en juillet selon divers calendriers chrétiens, parmi lesquels le Martyrologe hiéronymien, le Synaxaire de Constantinople et le Synaxaire copto-arabe. Les dates précises de ces fêtes sur le fragment du Gebel Adda ne peuvent être identifiées avec certitude, mais leur succession concorde avec les autres calendriers, attestant ainsi que le calendrier liturgique utilisé en Nubie chrétienne ne différait pas foncièrement de ceux des autres parties du monde chrétien.
Late Antique Cities and Archaeology by Efthymios Rizos
S. Greaves, A. Wallace-Hadrill, Rome and the Colonial City: Rethinking the Grid, 2022
Jahrbuch für Antike und Christentum 62, 2019
Antiquite Tardive 26, 2018
Novae et de Tropaeum indiquent que les titres des anciens municipia ont été remplacés par le titr... more Novae et de Tropaeum indiquent que les titres des anciens municipia ont été remplacés par le titre de civitas/polis, un changement symbolique qui reflétait les réformes administratives tétrarchiques et qui accompagnait des transformations plus profondes en matière d'urbanisme. La construction de cités nouvelles, comme Tropaeum ou Cabyle, représente l'émergence d'une forme de communauté étroitement associée à l'armée et aux structures du gouvernement impérial. Les édifices publics de ces cités ne comprennent que des fortifications et dépôts militaires. Cette impression est confirmée par un document épigraphique de Cabyle en Thrace, qui mentionne la participation de dekaprotoi/ decemprimi (chefs décurions) et du logistes/curator civitatis de la cité à l'administration d'un gynaeceum, une manufacture impériale. Ce document, datant de 309/310, donne une attestation précieuse de la structure d'un conseil municipal dans les premières années suivant la réforme tétrarchique. L'Illyricum nous offre plusieurs attestions épigraphiques de la fonction de defensor ou patronus civitatis/ekdikos. Cette fonction surtout juridique semble être établie dans la première moitié du iv e siècle et, comme celle du curator, elle doit aussi avoir été principalement ouverte à l'élite équestre. La première attestation du defensor dans le Code Theodosien en 364 interdit l'élection de décurions à cette charge, ce qui semble renvoyer à des irrégularités observées particulièrement en Illyricum. En principe, les defensores attestés par l'épigraphie semblent avoir été d'anciens officiels impériaux de rang équestre. Parmi les activités de ces magistrats, on trouve des actes d'évergétisme, surtout dans les communautés traditionnelles de l'Achaïe, mais aussi la liaison avec les autorités fiscales du gouvernement impérial et la collecte des impôts. Un cas particulier parmi les cités de la région est Thessalonique, siège de l'administration préfectorale d'Illyricum. Il semble que les Préfets du Prétoire d'Illyricum jouaient un rôle dans le gouvernement de leur capitale, analogue au rôle du Préfet urbain de Constantinople. Aux vi e et vii e siècles, le pouvoir dans cette cité semble avoir été principalement aux mains de la Préfecture et de l'archevêché. En ce sens, Thessalonique reflétait la fin d'un processus d'expansion de la puissance de l'Église et du gouvernement central, s'imposant au pouvoir des institutions municipales. [Auteur et Rédaction]
Sonderdruck aus dem Jahrbuch deS RömiSch-GeRmaniSchen ZentRalmuSeumS mainZ 60. Jahrgang 2013 eftH... more Sonderdruck aus dem Jahrbuch deS RömiSch-GeRmaniSchen ZentRalmuSeumS mainZ 60. Jahrgang 2013 eftHyMioS rizoS centres of the late roman military supply netWorK in the balKans: a survey of horrea Jahrbuch des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums 60 · 2013 659 Efthymios Rizos Centres of the late roman military supply network in the Balkans: a survey of horrea Beatitudine d(omini) n(ostri) Constantis victoris | ac triumfatoris semper Aug(usti) | provisa copia quae horreis deerat | postea quam condendis horrea deesse coeperunt | haec Vulc(atius) Rufinus v(ir) c(larissimus) praef(ectus) praet(orio) per se coepta || in securitatem perpetem rei annonariae dedicavit 1 »In the happy times of our lord Constans, the victorious and triumphant eternal Augustus. While supplies were anticipated that were insufficient to fill the warehouses, eventually the warehouses started to be insufficient for the goods to be stored. The vir clarissimus Vulcatius Rufinus, Praetorian Prefect, dedicated these (warehouses), which were commissioned by him, for the perpetual security of the annona.«
Journal of Roman Archaeology 24, 2011
O. Heinrich-Tamaszka, N. Krohn and S. Ristow (eds.), Christianisierung Europas: Entstehung, Entwicklung und Konsolidierung im archäologischen Befund, Regensburg, 2012
Jahrbuch des Römisch-GeRmanischen ZentRalmuseums mainZ 60. JahRGanG · 2013 bibliografische Inform... more Jahrbuch des Römisch-GeRmanischen ZentRalmuseums mainZ 60. JahRGanG · 2013 bibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek die deutsche nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische daten sind im internet über http://dnb.d-nb.de abrufbar.
Jahrbuch für Antike und Christentum 62, 2019
Constantinople by Efthymios Rizos
F. Spingou (ed.), The Visual Culture of Later Byzantium (c. 1081- c. 1350), 2022
by Efthymios Rizos, Jean-Michel Spieser, Carolyn Snively, John Bintliff, Sylvie Bletry, ASSENAT Martine, Elif Keser Kayaalp, Javier Martínez Jiménez, Günder Varinlioğlu, Martin Gussone, Jim Crow, Albrecht Berger, Georgios Deligiannakis, Knut Ødegård, Emanuele E . Intagliata, David Hill, and Håkon Roland
Reviewed by: N. Burkhardt, Historische Zeitschrift, 2019, Vol.309(1), pp.165-168 P. Maranzana, ... more Reviewed by:
N. Burkhardt, Historische Zeitschrift, 2019, Vol.309(1), pp.165-168
P. Maranzana, American Journal of Archaeology, 4/2019, Vol.123(2)
https://www.ajaonline.org/book-review/3856
E. Zanini, Medioevo Greco 19, 2019, 453-455
https://www.academia.edu/41221431/Reviev_of_Efthymios_Rizos_ed._New_Cities_in_Late_Antiquity._Documents_and_Archaeology_Turnhout_2017
M. Sartre, in Syria 96 (2019)
https://journals.openedition.org/syria/8971
by The Cult of Saints, Efthymios Rizos, Sergey Minov, Nikoloz Aleksidze, Paweł Nowakowski, Robert Wiśniewski, Theo Maarten van Lint, Matthieu Pignot, Marta Szada, Arietta Papaconstantinou, Julia Doroszewska, and Marijana Vukovic
A part of our database material is now available for consultation. Please, visit our website and ... more A part of our database material is now available for consultation. Please, visit our website and use the database!
L. Lavan (ed.), Burial and Memorial in Late Antiquity. Late Antique Archaeology 13/1, 2024
This paper explores the connection between the burial habits of the Christian lay elite and the o... more This paper explores the connection between the burial habits of the Christian lay elite and the origins of the use of partitioned and transferred relics of saints. On the basis of textual and archaeological evidence, it is argued that the mobility of relics was linked to the desire of powerful Christians to have their dead buried near the saints (ad sanctos). Perhaps emulating the model of the mausoleum of Constantine the Great, the earliest known translations of relics were conducted for the consecration of private funerary shrines in 4th c. Anatolia and Constantinople. Privately sponsored by lay aristocrats in collaboration with bishops and monks, these early translations were opposed by imperial legislation and parts of the Christian community, but they gradually contributed to normalising this controversial practice, until it became an established aspect of public religion by the 5th c.
Analecta Bollandiana, 2021
Journal is published twice a year (in June and December) in issues of 240 pages each. La Revue pa... more Journal is published twice a year (in June and December) in issues of 240 pages each. La Revue paraît deux fois par an (en juin et en décembre); chaque livraison compte 240 pages.
Paperback Edition: ISBN 978-1-78925-007-7 Digital Edition: ISBN 978-1-78925-008-4 (epub) AN OFFPR... more Paperback Edition: ISBN 978-1-78925-007-7 Digital Edition: ISBN 978-1-78925-008-4 (epub) AN OFFPRINT FROM
Ivan Bugarski, Orsolya Heinrich-Tamáska, Vujadin Ivanišević, Daniel Syrbe (eds.), GrenzÜbergänge. Late Roman, Early Christian, Early Byzantine as categories in historical-archaeological research on the middle Danube.
Analecta Bollandiana, 2020
Journal is published twice a year (in June and December) in issues of 240 pages each. La Revue pa... more Journal is published twice a year (in June and December) in issues of 240 pages each. La Revue paraît deux fois par an (en juin et en décembre); chaque livraison compte 240 pages.
Analecta Bollandiana, 138, p. 86-92, 2020
[résumé français ci-dessous] This article offers the edition of a parchment scrap found in the 19... more [résumé français ci-dessous] This article offers the edition of a parchment scrap found in the 1960s in Gebel Adda (Egyptian Nubia) and now kept in the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto. The scrap, inscribed on both sides, probably originates from a codex, which can be dated to the 10th/11th century on palaeographic grounds. It preserves fragments of a liturgical calendar in Greek, giving names of saints and days of a month. The legible names include: Athenogenes (of Pedachthoe), Euphemia (of Chalcedon), Tryphon, and Menelaus. All of them were martyrs venerated in July according to various Christian calendars, including the Martyrologium Hieronymianum, the Synaxarium of Constantinople, and the Copto-Arabic Synaxarium. The absolute dates of these feasts on the Gebel Adda scrap cannot be identified with certainty, but their sequence is consistent with the other calendars, thus attesting to the fact that the liturgical calendar used in Christian Nubia did not differ essentially from those of other parts of the Christian world.
Cet article propose l’édition d’un fragment de parchemin trouvé dans les années 1960 au Gebel Adda (Nubie égyptienne) et aujourd’hui conservé au Royal Ontario Museum, à Toronto. Le fragment, copié sur les deux faces, provient probablement d’un codex datable des Xe/XIe s., sur base de la paléographie. Il offre un fragment de calendrier liturgique en grec, donnant les noms de saints et les jours d’un mois. Les noms lisibles comprennent Athénogène (de Pédachthoé), Euphémie (de Chalcédoine), Tryphon et Ménélas. Tous étaient des martyrs vénérés en juillet selon divers calendriers chrétiens, parmi lesquels le Martyrologe hiéronymien, le Synaxaire de Constantinople et le Synaxaire copto-arabe. Les dates précises de ces fêtes sur le fragment du Gebel Adda ne peuvent être identifiées avec certitude, mais leur succession concorde avec les autres calendriers, attestant ainsi que le calendrier liturgique utilisé en Nubie chrétienne ne différait pas foncièrement de ceux des autres parties du monde chrétien.
S. Greaves, A. Wallace-Hadrill, Rome and the Colonial City: Rethinking the Grid, 2022
Jahrbuch für Antike und Christentum 62, 2019
Antiquite Tardive 26, 2018
Novae et de Tropaeum indiquent que les titres des anciens municipia ont été remplacés par le titr... more Novae et de Tropaeum indiquent que les titres des anciens municipia ont été remplacés par le titre de civitas/polis, un changement symbolique qui reflétait les réformes administratives tétrarchiques et qui accompagnait des transformations plus profondes en matière d'urbanisme. La construction de cités nouvelles, comme Tropaeum ou Cabyle, représente l'émergence d'une forme de communauté étroitement associée à l'armée et aux structures du gouvernement impérial. Les édifices publics de ces cités ne comprennent que des fortifications et dépôts militaires. Cette impression est confirmée par un document épigraphique de Cabyle en Thrace, qui mentionne la participation de dekaprotoi/ decemprimi (chefs décurions) et du logistes/curator civitatis de la cité à l'administration d'un gynaeceum, une manufacture impériale. Ce document, datant de 309/310, donne une attestation précieuse de la structure d'un conseil municipal dans les premières années suivant la réforme tétrarchique. L'Illyricum nous offre plusieurs attestions épigraphiques de la fonction de defensor ou patronus civitatis/ekdikos. Cette fonction surtout juridique semble être établie dans la première moitié du iv e siècle et, comme celle du curator, elle doit aussi avoir été principalement ouverte à l'élite équestre. La première attestation du defensor dans le Code Theodosien en 364 interdit l'élection de décurions à cette charge, ce qui semble renvoyer à des irrégularités observées particulièrement en Illyricum. En principe, les defensores attestés par l'épigraphie semblent avoir été d'anciens officiels impériaux de rang équestre. Parmi les activités de ces magistrats, on trouve des actes d'évergétisme, surtout dans les communautés traditionnelles de l'Achaïe, mais aussi la liaison avec les autorités fiscales du gouvernement impérial et la collecte des impôts. Un cas particulier parmi les cités de la région est Thessalonique, siège de l'administration préfectorale d'Illyricum. Il semble que les Préfets du Prétoire d'Illyricum jouaient un rôle dans le gouvernement de leur capitale, analogue au rôle du Préfet urbain de Constantinople. Aux vi e et vii e siècles, le pouvoir dans cette cité semble avoir été principalement aux mains de la Préfecture et de l'archevêché. En ce sens, Thessalonique reflétait la fin d'un processus d'expansion de la puissance de l'Église et du gouvernement central, s'imposant au pouvoir des institutions municipales. [Auteur et Rédaction]
Sonderdruck aus dem Jahrbuch deS RömiSch-GeRmaniSchen ZentRalmuSeumS mainZ 60. Jahrgang 2013 eftH... more Sonderdruck aus dem Jahrbuch deS RömiSch-GeRmaniSchen ZentRalmuSeumS mainZ 60. Jahrgang 2013 eftHyMioS rizoS centres of the late roman military supply netWorK in the balKans: a survey of horrea Jahrbuch des Römisch-Germanischen Zentralmuseums 60 · 2013 659 Efthymios Rizos Centres of the late roman military supply network in the Balkans: a survey of horrea Beatitudine d(omini) n(ostri) Constantis victoris | ac triumfatoris semper Aug(usti) | provisa copia quae horreis deerat | postea quam condendis horrea deesse coeperunt | haec Vulc(atius) Rufinus v(ir) c(larissimus) praef(ectus) praet(orio) per se coepta || in securitatem perpetem rei annonariae dedicavit 1 »In the happy times of our lord Constans, the victorious and triumphant eternal Augustus. While supplies were anticipated that were insufficient to fill the warehouses, eventually the warehouses started to be insufficient for the goods to be stored. The vir clarissimus Vulcatius Rufinus, Praetorian Prefect, dedicated these (warehouses), which were commissioned by him, for the perpetual security of the annona.«
Journal of Roman Archaeology 24, 2011
O. Heinrich-Tamaszka, N. Krohn and S. Ristow (eds.), Christianisierung Europas: Entstehung, Entwicklung und Konsolidierung im archäologischen Befund, Regensburg, 2012
Jahrbuch des Römisch-GeRmanischen ZentRalmuseums mainZ 60. JahRGanG · 2013 bibliografische Inform... more Jahrbuch des Römisch-GeRmanischen ZentRalmuseums mainZ 60. JahRGanG · 2013 bibliografische Information der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek die deutsche nationalbibliothek verzeichnet diese Publikation in der Deutschen Nationalbibliografie; detaillierte bibliografische daten sind im internet über http://dnb.d-nb.de abrufbar.
Jahrbuch für Antike und Christentum 62, 2019
F. Spingou (ed.), The Visual Culture of Later Byzantium (c. 1081- c. 1350), 2022
Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 221, 2022
A. E. Felle, B. Ward-Perkins (eds.), Cultic Graffiti in the Late Antique Mediterranean and Beyond, 2021
This definition is built on one suggested by Mark Handley (2017. 'Scratching as Devotion. Graffit... more This definition is built on one suggested by Mark Handley (2017. 'Scratching as Devotion. Graffiti, Pilgrimage and Liturgy in the Late Antique and Early Medi eval West' , in K. Bolle, C. Machado, and C. Witschel (eds), The Epi graphic Cultures of Late Antiquity (Stuttgart: Steiner), pp. 555-93, at p. 557): that a graffito is an 'informally-carved text placed secondarily on either living rock, or an existing structure or monument'; but with the addition of 'personal' and the removal of the need for graffiti to be 'carved'. Handley's definition sensibly excludes informal texts scratched onto portable objects, like potsherds. 4 See p. 178, n. 8.
Materials for the Study of Late Antique and Medieval Greek and Latin Inscriptions in Istanbul. A Revised and Expanded Booklet. Edited by Ida Toth and Andreas Rhoby, 2020
by Ida Toth, Andreas Rhoby, Anna M Sitz, Canan Arıkan-Caba, Matthew Kinloch, Maria Tomadaki, Estelle INGRAND-VARENNE, Desi Marangon, Nikos Tsivikis, Roman Shliakhtin, Nicholas Melvani, Efthymios Rizos, Ivana Jevtic, Nektarios Zarras, Brad Hostetler, Georgios Pallis, Maria Lidova, Alex Rodriguez Suarez, Meriç T. Öztürk, and Ivan Drpić
The volume 'Materials for the Study of Late Antique and Medieval Greek and Latin Inscriptions in ... more The volume 'Materials for the Study of Late Antique and Medieval Greek and Latin Inscriptions in Istanbul' is a revised and updated edition of the booklet originally produced for the Summer Programme in Byzantine Epigraphy. This collection of 37 essays has been prepared by Ida Toth and Andreas Rhoby to provide a broad coverage of Constantinople's (Istanbul's) inscriptional material dating back to the period between the 4th and the 15th centuries. It is intended as a comprehensive teaching tool and also as a dependable vademecum to the extant traces of Istanbul’s rich late antique and medieval epigraphic legacy: https://austriaca.at/8370-9
Reallexikon für Antike und Christentum 27 (Lieferung 210), 2015
by Foteini Spingou, Charles Barber, Nathan Leidholm, Thomas Carlson, Ivan Drpić, Alexandros (Alexander) Alexakis, elizabeth jeffreys, Theocharis Tsampouras, Mircea G . Duluș, Nikos Zagklas, Ida Toth, Alexander Riehle, Brad Hostetler, Michael Featherstone, Emmanuel C Bourbouhakis, Shannon Steiner, Efthymios Rizos, Divna Manolova, Robert Romanchuk, Maria Tomadaki, Kirsty Stewart, Baukje van den Berg, Katarzyna Warcaba, Florin Leonte, Vasileios Marinis, Ludovic Bender, Linda Safran, Sophia Kalopissi-Verti, Rachele Ricceri, Luisa Andriollo, Alex J Novikoff, Annemarie Carr, Marina Bazzani, Greti Dinkova-Bruun, Renaat Meesters, Daphne (Dafni) / Δάφνη Penna / Πέννα, Annemarie Carr, Alexander Alexakis, Jeremy Johns, Maria Parani, Lisa Mahoney, Irena Spadijer, and Ilias Taxidis
ISBN: 9781108483056 Series: Sources for Byzantine Art History 3 In this book the beauty and m... more ISBN: 9781108483056
Series: Sources for Byzantine Art History 3
In this book the beauty and meaning of Byzantine art and its aesthetics are for the first time made accessible through the original sources. More than 150 medieval texts are translated from nine medieval languages into English, with commentaries from over seventy leading scholars. These include theories of art, discussions of patronage and understandings of iconography, practical recipes for artistic supplies, expressions of devotion, and descriptions of cities. The volume reveals the cultural plurality and the interconnectivity of medieval Europe and the Mediterranean from the late eleventh to the early fourteenth centuries. The first part uncovers salient aspects of Byzantine artistic production and its aesthetic reception, while the second puts a spotlight on particular ways of expressing admiration and of interpreting of the visual.
The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, 2000
The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, 2000
The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, 2000
The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, 2000
The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, 2000
The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, 2000
Plekos 22, 2020
https://plekos.jimdofree.com/2020/02/17/thilo-ulbert-hrsg-forschungen-in-resafa-sergiupolis-2016/
Byzantina Symmeikta, 2015
Journal of Roman Archaeology 25, 2015
Göttinger Forum für Altertumswissenschaft 16, 2013
Journal of Roman Archaeology 26, 2013
An unexpected and original approach to early Rome V. Jolivet Villas? Romaines? Républicaines? M. ... more An unexpected and original approach to early Rome V. Jolivet Villas? Romaines? Républicaines? M. Lawall Towards a new social and economic history of the Hellenistic world S. L. Dyson Questions about influence on Roman urbanism in the Middle Republic R. Ling Hellenistic paintings in Italy and Sicily L. A. Mazurek Reconsidering the role of Egyptianizing material culture in Hellenistic and Roman Greece S. G. Bernard Politics and public construction in Republican Rome D. Booms A group of villas around Tivoli, with questions about otium and Republican construction techniques C. J. Smith The Latium of Athanasius Kircher M. A. Tomei Note su Palatium di Filippo Coarelli F. Sear A new monograph on the Theatre of Pompey E. M. Steinby Necropoli vaticane-revisioni e novità J. E. Packer The Atlante: Roma antica revealed E. Papi Roma magna taberna: economia della produzione e distribuzione nell'Urbe C. F. Noreña The socio-spatial embeddedness of Roman law D. Nonnis & C. Pavolini Epigrafi in contesto: il caso di Ostia C. Pavolini Porto e il suo territorio S. J. R. Ellis The shops and workshops of Herculaneum A. Wallace-Hadrill Trying to define and identify the Roman "middle classes" T. A. J. McGinn Sorting out prostitution in Pompeii: the material remains, terminology and the legal sources Y. Perrin L'écrit au quotidien dans le monde romain D. L. Stone Surveying urban landscapes C. Williamson The consul at Rome S. Thakur Organized opposition to a principate in transition? L. L. Brice The emperor (Claudius) in the Roman world J. S. Nikolaus The study of slavery: past issues and present approaches M. L. Laird The progress of scholarship on liberti N. M. Ray A collected economy W. Scheidel Italian manpower A. L. Goldman Rome and the power of the gladius B. I. Sandor Jupiter's finest wheels V. H. Pennanen Seeing the gods-or not T. V. Franconi Rome and the power of ancient rivers B. D. Shaw Collected historical essays around Apuleius R. S. Bagnall The Antonine Plague returns M. MacKinnon Modern perspectives on ancient animal sacrifice W. Heinz An engineer studies heating systems in baths W. Heinz Bedeutende Forschung zu einem 'anrüchigen' Thema R. Ling Wall-paintings in Greek and Roman sanctuaries A. E. Hanson A farming handbook and its relevance for science and medicine A. M. Small A major conference on central Apulia and Peucetia and a new synthesis on rural settlement E. Fentress The patrimonium and the peasant I. J. Marshman Return to sender? Letters, literacy, and Roman sealing practices J. L. Davies A major work on temporary camps in Scotland H. W. Horsnaes Coins from Roman Britain in light of the Portable Antiquities Scheme Table of contents of fascicule 2 (continued) T. V. Buttrey Gold coins from Britannia and their (archaeological) value M. Segard Gestion et usages de l'eau dans les Alpes occidentales romaines P. Visonà Monetary circulation in the south of France from the 6th c. B.C. to the age of Augustus D. L. Bomgardner The Fréjus amphitheatre: to be or not to be? The place of an ancient monument in a modern world R. Reece Cremation and cremation burial in NE Gaul A. Gavini Isiaca et aegyptiaca nella penisola iberica W. E. Mierse Post-colonial theory and the study of Roman Spain H. Williams Lamps from Algeria E. Papi Châteaux en Espagne? Lixus 3 et le palais de Juba II S. Stevens Cyprian's intangible Roman foundations J. Freed Excavating Roman Carthage: two contrasting (French and German) reports S. Keay African olive oil and its distribution to Spain and Rome D. P. S. Peacock Getting around in Albania C. Eger Some late graves, mortuary practices, and their relevance for social life at Isthmia C. S. Lightfoot The results of surveying around Aphrodisias J.-P. Sodini L'île de Cos et ses basiliques protobyzantines R. Gordon Hero-cults, old and new C. Foss The archaeology of cities (and more) in Turkey P. Kenrick The joys of studying Roman cooking ware in the Middle East (Syria and Turkey) M. Fischer The minor arts and cultural influences at Dor Z. Weiss How do we study daily life in the Second Temple period? J. A. Overman Roman temples in Israel: caveat emptor B. Ward-Perkins Le Mura Aureliane R. Reece Archaeological versus historical 'facts' T. D. Barnes The Theodosian Code and the personality of Constantine L. Dossey Late-antique peasants: tensions, misunderstandings, and élite distaste E. Rizos Keszthely-Fenékpuszta and the Danube from late antiquity to the Middle Ages A. H. Chen Sorting out palaces and villas in late antiquity J. Conant Christians 'persecuting' Christians in North Africa, and intrusions by the State M. Whittow The Maeander valley in the Long Ancient World: or, Why bother with archaeology? W. Eck Zur Analyse der Kriterien politisch-administrativer Entscheidungsprozesse der römischen Kaiser von Augustus bis Phocas D. Frankfurter Books, lists, and scribes in Early Christian Egypt J. Magness A colloquium on the Byzantine-early Islamic transition J.-P. Sodini Le commerce byzantin du IV e au XV e siècle: de la région au monde méditerranéen BOOKS RECEIVED BOOKS REVIEWED IN THIS ISSUE
324: Constantine’s Choice and the Origins of New Rome Symposium organised by B. Pittarakis and P... more 324: Constantine’s Choice and the Origins of New Rome
Symposium organised by B. Pittarakis and P. Magdalino
Pera Museum Istanbul and Istanbul Research Institute, November 7-8 2024
JE Naissances et renaissances de cites dans les sources de l'Antiquite Tardive
by Paschalis Androudis, Mustafa Çağhan Keskin, Lilyana Yordanova, Maximilian Hartmuth, Efthymios Rizos, Melina Perdikopoulou, Katerina Kousoula, Androniki Batzikosta, Sonia Gkounta, Dimitris P. Drakoulis, Nikolaos Vryzidis, Georgia Graikou, Dimitris Liakos, Aineias Oikonomou, Varvara Papadopoulou, Tenia Anastasiadou, Ρούλα Σδρόλια, Kostas Kamburidis, Ayşe KAYAPINAR, Χρύσα Μελκίδη, ELEFTHERIA TSAKANIKA, Emre Kolay, Eleni Faka, Marina Petkakis, and Eleftheria Konstantinidou
Machiel Kiel is a pioneering and prominent figure in the study of Ottoman architecture in the Bal... more Machiel Kiel is a pioneering and prominent figure in the study of Ottoman architecture in the Balkans. He has traveled and researched the area extensively since the late 1960s.The Ottoman monuments in Greece are studied by him beginning with an article on Thessaloniki, which was published in the Balkan Studies journal in 1970. Nowadays,
more than half a century later, it is worthy to revisit the topic with the organization of an international conference in orde r to trace the current condition of fields such as the research and conservation of Ottoman architecture , urban formation, the history of the city, as well as both Ottoman and Christian art with a focus in Greece
Late Antique and Byzantine Studies Seminar - Special Series Procopius and the Language of Buildings
by Robert Wiśniewski, The Cult of Saints, Maria Lidova, Efthymios Rizos, Adam Łajtar, Konstantin Klein, Aaltje Hidding, Olga Špehar, Anna Lampadaridi, András Handl, Julia Doroszewska, and Marlena Whiting
Full programme now available: http://cslaconference.ihuw.pl/
On Friday 12 June, the Cult of Saints Project, in association with the Empires of Faith Project, ... more On Friday 12 June, the Cult of Saints Project, in association with the Empires of Faith Project, co-organises a colloquium dedicated to the iconography of saints in late antique art. Six talks will be given by members of the two project teams (Jaś Elsner, Bryan Ward-Perkins, Maria Lidova, and Efthymios Rizos) and guest speakers (John Mitchell and Ine Jacobs), discussing aspects of the emergent iconography of saints in Christian art.
SAfA, 2020
In many modern societies identity and social boundaries are often constructed through binary oppo... more In many modern societies identity and social boundaries are often constructed through binary oppositions between “past” and “present” or “us” and “them.” In our “present,” the past is frequently conceptualized through a flux of shifting ideas, images, and categories that are associated with material culture from different periods and regions. Fields such as archaeology, art history, and classics, for instance, use material culture to make sense of the past and present it in a more tangible and imaginable form to the present. Since the start of the twenty-first century, historians have been paying close attention, on the one hand, to the genealogy and underpinnings of these interpretative approaches and, on the other, to the ways in which societies have actualized the material traces of the past for political and socio-economic reasons.
This symposium sets out to explore the ways in which African societies approached their own past, with a focus on the relationship between identity and material culture. Topics of interest include: how did societies forge new connections with ruins and monuments that were present in the territories they inhabited? In which ways was material culture used to support competing interpretations of the past? Is it possible to identify traces of iconoclasm in the historical and archaeological record of Africa? How were human activities shaped by different concepts of time?
Bulletin archéologique des Écoles françaises à l’étranger , 2024
Date précise de l’opération : 1er au 10 juillet 2023 (étude du territoire) et du 28 août au 7 oct... more Date précise de l’opération : 1er au 10 juillet 2023 (étude du territoire) et du 28 août au 7 octobre 2023 (mission de fouille)
Autorité nationale présente : Dimitra Malamidou, Éphorie des Antiquités de Serrès
Numéro de mission : I52
Composition de l’équipe de terrain : Responsables adjoints du programme : Olga Boubounelle, Ioannis Chalazonitis, Priscilla Ralli, Euthymios Rizos, Bastien Rueff.
Responsables de secteurs : Ioannis Chalazonitis (secteur 1), Bastien Rueff (secteur 2), Olga Boubounelle, Priscilla Ralli et Euthymios Rizos (secteur 3). Topographe : Brieuc Guillaume ; restaurateur : Aristophane Konstantatos ; architecte : Sotiria Kriemadi ; céramologue : Vaggelis Papaioannou ; étudiants : Manon Arnaud, Claire Despagne, Morgane Monnier, Loukia Paraschou, Aymeric Piteüs New, Lucie Sanchez, Alexandre Valette ; ouvriers : Asterios Rigas, Panagiotis Kasapis, Nikolaos Laskarakis, Dimitrios Papazoglou.
Composition de l’équipe du programme vigne et vin (VitiOrient) : Responsable du programme : Clémence Pagnoux (MNHN). Composition de l’équipe : Ninon Blond (ENS Lyon), Laetitia Balaresque (étudiante) ; Guillaume Bidaut (étudiant).
Établissements porteurs d’opération :
– École française d’Athènes
– Éphorie des Antiquités de Serrès
Organisme financeurs :
– École française d’Athènes
– Éphorie des Antiquités de Serrès
– Institut français d’archéologie orientale
– Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle/AASPE UMR 7209 MNHN CNRS INRAP, Paris, France
– Municipalité de Bisaltie