Tchentsova V. A Corpus of Post-Byzantine Seals: Research cataloguing project, in: Byzantine and Rus’ Seals. Proceedings of the International Colloquium on Rus’-Byzantine Sigillography. Kyiv, Ukraine, 13-16 September 2013. Kyiv: The Sheremetievs’ Museum, 2015, p. 263-279 (original) (raw)

Impressions of Seventeenth-Century Seals in Greek Manuscripts Collected in the State Historical Museum of Moscow, in: Byzantine and Rus’ Seals (Kyiv 2015): 281–311 (in English)

В статье исследуется чернильный оттиск печати вселенского патриарха Паисия (1657–1678), который был центральной фигурой в истории греческо-русских связей второй половины XVII в. и сыграл одну из ключевых ролей в «Деле патриарха Никона». Оттиск обнаружен и идентифицирован нами в греческой рукописи из собрания Государственного Исторического Музея в Москве – ГИМ, Влад. 114 (Син. греч. 431) – и служил знаком ее принадлежности владельцу печати. Сама же рукопись содержала важные канонические греческие тексты, то и дело меняла своих владельцев, т.е. была востребована в кругах книжников того времени. Нами также сделана подборка всех разновидностей печатей и подписей Паисия Александрийского на греческих и славянских грамотах, хранящихся в московских собраниях РГАДА и ГИМ, а также определен его почерк.

Byzantine seals from the Ras Fortress, Zbornik radova Vizantološkog instituta 50, 2013, 449-462.

In this paper, seals found at the location of the Ras fortress (Tvrđava Ras) have been published. Inscriptions on these seals show that they used to belong to persons which could be identifi ed with certain military commanders who served under Alexios I Komnenos. The seals in question are: the seals of protonobelissimos Eustathios Kamytzes, Constantine Dalassenos Doukas, protoproedros and doux Constantine Kekaumenos and a certain person called Alexios.

Byzantine Lead Seals Issued by State Officials in Ödemiş Archaeological Museum

This study examines nine Byzantine lead seals in the Ödemiş Archeology Museum, dated to 8 th-11 th centuries AD, which belong to central authorities in charge of military and financial affairs. Research on three of the seals have been recently published in an article about sicillographic materials in the Ödemiş collection. This article comprises of different suggestions and editing of the reading of the seals examined in the abovementioned article as well as analysis on the content of the six other unpublished seals in the Ödemiş collection.

Two Byzantine Seals from the Excavation of the Medieval Fortress “Malkoto kale” (Yambol Region, Bulgaria)

Studia Ceranea. Journal of the Waldemar Ceran Research Centre for the History and Culture of the Mediterranean Area and South-East Europe

The present article aims to put into scholarly circulation two new unpublished Byzantine lead seals from the medieval fortress in the area of the village of Voden (municipality of Bolyarovo, Yambol region, Bulgaria). They were handed to the Regional Historical Museum in the town of Yambol as a result of the regular archaeological excavations of the site near the village of Voden, conducted in the period 2012–2019. The first seal dates from the last quarter of the 11th century and has a bust of the Holy Virgin with a halo and a round medallion with the image of the Infant Jesus Christ who blesses with both hands. From the legend on the reverse, it is clear that the bulla belonged to a Byzantine dignitary named Michael Tzitas, who advertises himself with the title of (proto)kouropalates and the position of doux. The second seal dates from the end of the 11th – the beginning of the 12th century and has an interesting and relatively rare iconographic plot depicting three military saints...

Byzantine Seals in the Manisa Museum

Manisa Müzesi Yıllığı, 2023

Introduction In this study, 55 seals (and 3 blanks) dating to the Byzantine Period preserved in the Manisa Museum and recorded in the inventory were analyzed. Among the seals examined, 8 examples presented in this study with catalogue numbers 59-66 were found to be modern copies of low quality1. The seals dating to the Byzantine period in the Manisa Museum were generally acquired by purchase from individuals. Unfortunately, the information provided by the persons who brought the Byzantine seals to the Manisa Museum for sale is not considered to be definitive. Although there is no definite information about the find location of the Byzantine seals brought to the museum on different dates, it is thought that they came from Manisa and its region. However, it is known that Manisa and its surroundings, where settlement was active since antiquity, was an important center during the Byzantine Period. Manisa/Magnesia was especially an important settlement center during the Empire of Nicaea at 13th century, one of the successor states established after the occupation of Constantinople by the Latins. In our study on the Byzantine seals in the Manisa Museum, the seals are presented in a certain classification. As a result of this study on the seals registered in the inventory of metal artefacts in Manisa Museum, lead seals belonging to different periods of the Byzantine Empire are presented. The lead seals dating to the Byzantine Empire in Manisa Museum were firstly identified and among these seals, 1 emperor's seal and seal samples belonging to state officials in the central and provincial administration were found. In addition to these, it was determined that there were seals used in palace and church use. In addition, lead seals in personal use are also presented within the scope of the study by identifying names and titles. Blank seal printing samples are also included in the museum collection. One of the most interesting parts of the study is the modern counterfeit seal samples produced today. This study sheds light on the Byzantine Empire lead seals found in Manisa and its region, where different civilizations have existed for centuries, and recorded in the museum inventory. Finally, in our study on the Byzantine seals in the Manisa Museum, the seals are presented in a certain classification.