The witty and self-assertive poetry of Christopher of Mytilene and John Mauropous provides unique snapshots of eleventh-century Constantinople at the height of its splendor and elegance. Their collections, aptly called “various verses,” greatly range in length and style—including epigrams, polemics, encomia, and more—and their poems were written for a broad range of social occasions such as court ceremonies, horse races, contests between schools, and funerals. Some were inscribed on icons and buildings. Many honored patrons and friends, debunked rivals, or offered satirical portraits of moral types in contemporary society. In some remarkable introspective poems, Mauropous carefully shaped a narrative of his life and career, while Christophe...
This contribution describes a specific discourse of gift giving in the texts of Michael Psellos, Joh...
Numerous rhetorical writings of the Comnenian period constitute a fruitful field of research, both w...
Letters were an important medium of everyday communication in the ancient Mediterranean. Soon after ...
The witty and self-assertive poetry of Christopher of Mytilene and John Mauropous provides unique sn...
Poetry from the period 1025-81 is mainly written by members of the intellectual elite in Constantino...
In the mid-eleventh century, secular Byzantine poetry attained a hitherto unseen degree of wit, vivi...
This paper investigates the various conditions of circulation and reception of poems in the Byzantin...
Christophoros Mitylenaios was born in Constantinople at the beginning op the 11th century, apparentl...
Byzantine poetry of the eleventh century is fascinating, yet underexplored terrain. It presents a li...
The popular poetry of Byzantium fi rst appears in the form of consistent surviving texts of some siz...
John Mauropous is one of the most prolific poets of the 11th century and, for his inner characterist...
The Anonymous Poem addressed to George of Antioch, plenipotentiary minister of the Norman king Roger...
This chapter gives an overview of how Byzantines conceptualized “poetry.” It argues that from the By...
The BSP survives as an eleventh-century translation from Syriac into Greek, whose plot revolves arou...
The popular poetry of Byzantium first appears in the form of consistent surviving texts of some size...
This contribution describes a specific discourse of gift giving in the texts of Michael Psellos, Joh...
Numerous rhetorical writings of the Comnenian period constitute a fruitful field of research, both w...
Letters were an important medium of everyday communication in the ancient Mediterranean. Soon after ...
The witty and self-assertive poetry of Christopher of Mytilene and John Mauropous provides unique sn...
Poetry from the period 1025-81 is mainly written by members of the intellectual elite in Constantino...
In the mid-eleventh century, secular Byzantine poetry attained a hitherto unseen degree of wit, vivi...
This paper investigates the various conditions of circulation and reception of poems in the Byzantin...
Christophoros Mitylenaios was born in Constantinople at the beginning op the 11th century, apparentl...
Byzantine poetry of the eleventh century is fascinating, yet underexplored terrain. It presents a li...
The popular poetry of Byzantium fi rst appears in the form of consistent surviving texts of some siz...
John Mauropous is one of the most prolific poets of the 11th century and, for his inner characterist...
The Anonymous Poem addressed to George of Antioch, plenipotentiary minister of the Norman king Roger...
This chapter gives an overview of how Byzantines conceptualized “poetry.” It argues that from the By...
The BSP survives as an eleventh-century translation from Syriac into Greek, whose plot revolves arou...
The popular poetry of Byzantium first appears in the form of consistent surviving texts of some size...
This contribution describes a specific discourse of gift giving in the texts of Michael Psellos, Joh...
Numerous rhetorical writings of the Comnenian period constitute a fruitful field of research, both w...
Letters were an important medium of everyday communication in the ancient Mediterranean. Soon after ...