ABSTRACT

The hagiography produced between two cultural borderlines in Byzantine history, namely the literary and artistic eclipse of the years ca. 650–800 sometimes known as the Byzantine ‘Dark Age’ and the composition of such collections as the Metaphrastic Menologion and the Synaxarion of Constantinople, is largely coterminous with that produced in the age of Iconoclasm and the period immediately after Iconoclasm. 1 The period from 730 to 843 and the years thereafter saw the emergence of a considerable number of new saints whose achievements were extolled in nearly 100 extant biographies, Enkomia and Translations of relics. 2 Yet this large number of texts only partly accounts for the full range of hagiography produced from the eighth to the tenth centuries. On the one hand, the Synaxarion of Constantinople and some of the hymnography of this period celebrate saints who may have inspired fully-fledged biographies, now lost; on the other hand, new saints were far from having a monopoly over the new hagiography. Much neglected by Byzantinists, mostly because of their low historical value and imprecise dating, texts praising the Early Christian martyrs represent a high proportion of the overall output of this period. But in a fair quantitative and critical assessment of ninth- and tenth-century hagiography, they must certainly receive their share of attention, all the more so if they point to the development of a certain cult and/or form part of the literary œuvre of a significant author.