Dimitris Stamatopoulos undertakes the first systematic comparison of the dominant ethnic historiographic models and divergences elaborated by Greek, Bulgarian, Serbian, Albanian, Romanian, Turkish, and Russian intellectuals with reference to the ambiguous inheritance of Byzantium. The title alludes
Byzantium after the Nation: The Problem of Continuity in Balkan Historiographies
β Scribed by Dimitris Stamatopoulos
- Publisher
- Central European University Press
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 410
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Dimitris Stamatopoulos undertakes the first systematic comparison of the dominant ethnic historiographic models and divergences elaborated by Greek, Bulgarian, Serbian, Albanian, Romanian, Turkish, and Russian intellectuals with reference to the ambiguous inheritance of Byzantium. The title alludes to the seminal work of Nicolae Iorga in the 1930s, Byzantium after Byzantium, that argued for the continuity between the Byzantine and the Ottoman empires. The idea of the continuity of empires became a kind of touchstone for national historiographies. Rival Balkan nationalisms engaged in a "war of interpretation" as to the nature of Byzantium, assuming different positions of adoption or rejection of its imperial model and leading to various schemes of continuity in each national historiographic canon.
Stamatopoulos discusses what Byzantium represented for nineteenth- and twentieth-century scholars and how their perceptions related to their treatment of the imperial model: whether a different perception of the medieval Byzantine period prevailed in the Greek national center as opposed to Constantinople; how nineteenth-century Balkan nationalists and Russian scholars used Byzantium to invent their own medieval period (and, by extension, their own antiquity); and finally, whether there exist continuities or discontinuities in these modes of making ideological use of the past.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Transliterations
Preface to the English Edition
Chapter I Introduction
Chapter II The Iconoclast Byzantium of Greek Nationalism
Chapter III The βMedieval Antiquityβ of Bulgarian Historiography
Chapter IV Byzantinisms and the Third Rome: Russian Imperial Nationalism
Chapter V The βRoman Byzantiumβ of the Albanian Historiography
Chapter VI Byzantium as Second Rome: Orientalism and Nationalism in the Balkans
Chapter VII Iconoclasts against Iconolaters: Conclusions
Bibliography
Index
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