ABSTRACT

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.

chapter |6 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|24 pages

‘And the whole city cheered’

The poetics and politics of the miraculous in the Early Palaiologan period

chapter 2|22 pages

Art in decline or art in the age of decline?

Historiography and new approaches to Late Byzantine painting

chapter 3|18 pages

The timeliness of timelessness

Reconsidering decline in the Palaiologan period

chapter 4|14 pages

Reconsidering the Early Palaiologan period

Anti-Latin propaganda, miracle accounts, and monumental art

chapter 6|14 pages

Looking beyond the city walls of Mystras

The transformation of the religious landscape of Laconia

chapter 7|14 pages

Remnants of an era

Monasteries and lay piety in Late Byzantine Sozopolis

chapter 8|24 pages

Palaiologan art from regional Crete

Artistic decline or social progress?

chapter 10|16 pages

Who is that man?

The perception of Byzantium in fifteenth-century Italy

chapter 11|14 pages

The story behind the image

The literary patronage of Tsar Ivan Alexander of Bulgaria between ostentation and decline