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dc.date.accessioned2024-02-22T16:04:18Z
dc.date.available2024-02-22T16:04:18Z
dc.date.issued2022
dc.identifierONIX_20240222_9788869695902_3
dc.identifier.issn3715-9453
dc.identifier.urihttps://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/134403
dc.description.abstractThe present volume collects most of the contributions to the plenary sessions held at the 24th International Congress of Byzantine Studies, and incisively reflects the ever increasing broadening of the very concept of ‘Byzantine Studies’. Indeed, a particularly salient characteristic of the papers presented here is their strong focus on interdisciplinarity and their breadth of scope, both in terms of methodology and content. The cross-pollination between different fields of Byzantine Studies is also a major point of the volume. Archaeology and art history have pride of place; it is especially in archaeological papers that one can grasp the vital importance of the interaction with the so-called hard sciences and with new technologies for contemporary research. This relevance of science and technology for archaeology, however, also applies to, and have significant repercussions in, historical studies, where – for example – the study of climate change or the application of specific software to network studies are producing a major renewal of knowledge. In more traditional subject fields, like literary, political, and intellectual history, the contributions to the present volume offer some important reflections on the connection between Byzantium and other cultures and peoples through the intermediary of texts, stories, diplomacy, trade, and war.
dc.languageEnglish
dc.languageItalian
dc.languageFrench
dc.relation.ispartofseriesThe 24th International Congress of Byzantine Studies
dc.subject.otherAnatolia,Remote sensing,Epigrams,Interdisciplines,Water jar,Builder,Conflicts,Caucasus,Iconography,weaponry,Robert and Mildred Bliss,Byzantine Studies,Late Antiquity,Byzantine literature,Royall Tyler,Edgar,English Mandate,Silks,History of sciences,Triumphal columns,Sociology,Placemaking,Cities,interaction,Arabic,Academic practices,Textiles,Adaptations,Byzantine archaeology,William the Conqueror,Geocommunication,Metalwork,Portable art,elite,Dynasties,Ottomans,Persian,Anthropology,Normans,History of climate and society,Byzantine history,Ceramic finds,Description of cities,Epigraphy,Theories of exchange,Law history,Production,Research methodology (in Byzantine legal studies),History of Byzantine law,Material culture networks,writing,Health,Global history,Knowledge production,Constantinople,Urban archaeology,Writing,Geography,Borderland/Frontier,Viking,Spatial analysis,Interdisciplinarity,Healthscape,Power relations,Sociometry,French Mandate,Environmental history,Survival of cities,Turks,Urban rescue excavations,remote sensing,Byzantium,Anglo-Danish,Metaphrasis,Regressive engineering,Weaponry,Orestes,Transitional period,Asia,History of religions,Interactions with other cultures,Sigillographie,Head loading,Eastern Roman Empire,Foundation stories,Epigraphie,Inscriptions,Analysis,Sigillography,Gold,Reception,Residential architecture,Iconographie,Harald Hardrada,Roman administration,Literature,American University Museums,Byzantine age,Catalogue,Network analysis,Commerce,Sacred spaces,Amorium,Texts,Sacred landscapes,Progress,Education,Imperial Roman period,basileus,laudes,Consilience,Island,Byzantine identity,Alans,Imperial Roman Period,Late antiquity,builder,Tales,mercenaries,Byzantine trade,LiDAR,Translations,Early Medieval Mediterranean,Prosopographie,Adrianople,Database,Laudes,Gifts,Hybridity,Turkish,Mediterranean,diplomacy,Theory,Byzantine Constantinople,Architectural heritage,Tradition,Byzantine-Islamic relations,American university museums,Byzantine studies,Economic and non-economic exchange,Byzantine,dynasties,Cultural history,Concepts,Vocabulary,island,Byzantine legal studies,Red slip,Hadrian,Edward the Confessor,tales,Prosopography,Interaction,Italy,Iceland,quarries,Basileus,Foundation Stories,Production site,Isauria,Edirne,Studies,Stratagems,borderland/frontier,French mandate,Ceramic,Sasanian empire,Distribution patterns,Globular amphora,English mandate,Mercenaries,Eastern Christianity,Diplomacy,Cnut,Historical geography,Ragnvald,Crafts,stratagems,Constantinople, ecclesiastical architecture,Byzantine art,Methodology,texts,Culture of the collection,Embroidery,Constantinople, monasteries,Byzantine law,Bases de données,consilience,Asia Minor,Tabula Imperii Byzantini (TIB),Climate history,Syriac studies,Trade hub,Quarries,Monasteries,Italian museums and churches,Balkans,Ecclesiastical architecture,Space,gold,Elite,Byzantine-awareness,Chronicles,Roman infrastructure,Plunder,Philology,Tribute,Complexity theory,Digital humanities,Conservation policies
dc.titleProceedings of the Plenary Sessions
dc.title.alternativeThe 24th International Congress of Byzantine Studies
dc.typebook
oapen.identifier.doi10.30687/978-88-6969-590-2
oapen.relation.isPublishedBy4213f1ed-14d0-44b5-91b3-3cc52df9b961
oapen.relation.isbn9788869695902
oapen.series.number79


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