Late Byzantium Reconsidered

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Alexios II
Andronikos II
Andronikos II Palaiologos
Angeliki Lymberopoulou
Benozzo Gozzoli
Byzantine visual culture
Byzantium
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Category=NHC
Category=NHTB
Chora Monastery
Decline
Domenikos Theotokopoulos
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
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eq_non-fiction
Giovanni Di Bicci
Grand Komnenoi
John Kantakouzenos
John VIII Palaiologos
Komnenoi of Trebizond
Laconia
Late Byzantine
Late Byzantine Art
late Byzantine artistic innovation
Late Byzantine Painting
Late Byzantine Period
Mattiello
medieval art history
Mediterranean
Mediterranean elites
Ministero Dei Beni
Monument art
National Library
Nikephoros Kallistos Xanthopoulos
Palaiologan
Palaiologan Art
Palaiologan Era
Palaiologan painting
Palaiologan Period
Patriarch Athanasios
religious artefacts analysis
Rossi
Scientific Manuscripts
socio-cultural identity
St Demetrios
Theodore Metochites
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367671525
  • Weight: 349g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Dec 2020
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Late Byzantium Reconsidered offers a unique collection of essays analysing the artistic achievements of Mediterranean centres linked to the Byzantine Empire between 1261, when the Palaiologan dynasty re-conquered Constantinople, and the decades after 1453, when the Ottomans took the city, marking the end of the Empire. These centuries were characterised by the rising of socio-political elites, in regions such as Crete, Italy, Laconia, Serbia, and Trebizond, that, while sharing cultural and artistic values influenced by the Byzantine Empire, were also developing innovative and original visual and cultural standards.

The comparative and interdisciplinary framework offered by this volume aims to challenge established ideas concerning the late Byzantine period such as decline, renewal, and innovation. By examining specific case studies of cultural production from within and outside Byzantium, the chapters in this volume highlight the intrinsic innovative nature of the socio-cultural identities active in the late medieval and early modern Mediterranean vis-à-vis the rhetorical assumption of the cultural contraction of the Byzantine Empire.

Andrea Mattiello holds a PhD from the Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies, University of Birmingham, UK. His research focuses on the art, architecture, and visual cultural production of the Palaiologan period. In particular, he has worked on cross-cultural interactions at the court of Mystras in relation to the agency of the Italian and Frankish wives of the Byzantine despots of Morea, and on late medieval and early modern image production in the context of the exchanges between Greek scholars and Italian humanists.

Maria Alessia Rossi completed her PhD at the Courtauld Institute of Art in 2017 and is currently the Samuel H. Kress Postdoctoral Researcher at the Index of Medieval Art at Princeton University, USA. Her main research interests include medieval art and architecture in the Byzantine and Slavic cultural spheres, artistic production and patronage in the Mediterranean, cross-cultural contacts and eclecticism in art between the Eastern and Western Christian world, the role of the miraculous, image theory, and gender theory.