توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب The Cambridge Companion to Constantinople
نام کتاب : The Cambridge Companion to Constantinople
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : همراه کمبریج به قسطنطنیه
سری :
نویسندگان : Sarah Bassett
ناشر : Cambridge University Press
سال نشر : 2022
تعداد صفحات : 436
ISBN (شابک) : 9781108498180 , 2021026079
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 14 مگابایت
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فهرست مطالب :
Cover
Half-title
Title page
Copyright information
Dedication
Contents
List of Figures
Notes on Contributors
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction
Historiographical Considerations: Organizing the Narrative
Discovering and Writing Constantinopolitan History
Textual Study and Constantinopolitan History
Notes
Part I The Place and Its People
1: Before Constantinople
The Situation and Character of Greek Byzantion
Origins and Early History
The Hellenistic and Roman City
Further Reading
Notes
2: Urban Development and Decline, Fourth-Fifteenth Centuries
Ancient Byzantium
The City of Constantine, 330-79
Pagan and Christian Monuments
Expanding the City
The City of Theodosios, 379-450
The New Land and Sea Walls
The Notitia urbis Constantinopolitanae
The Heyday of Constantinople
The Dark Ages
The Second Age of Prosperity
The Latin Occupation
Late Byzantine Constantinople
Further Reading
Notes
3: The People of Constantinople
Numbers
A City of Immigrants
Questions of Status: Insiders and Outsiders
Ethnicity
Conclusions
Further Reading
Notes
Part II Practical Matters
4: Waters for a Capital: Hydraulic Infrastructure and Use in Byzantine Constantinople
A View from Baghdad
Previous Research
Water and the Growth of a Great City
Water in the City
An Aqueduct of Justinian?
After the Dry Years
Water in Medieval Constantinople
Conclusion
Further Reading
Notes
5: The Supply of Food to Constantinople
The Capital of an Eastern Mediterranean Empire
The Capital of an Aegean Empire
Markets, Labor, Status
A Capital without an Empire
Continuities
Further Reading
Notes
6: Constantinople: Building and Maintenance
A Subject of Study, a Point of View, and a Method
Infrastructure Projects, Public Monuments, Vernacular Architecture
Legislation
Construction
Conclusions
Further Reading
Notes
7: The Defence of Constantinople
Further Reading
Notes
Part III Urban Experiences
8: Imperial Constantinople
Imperial Palaces
The Great Palace
The Blachernai Palace
Other Imperial Palaces in the City and Suburbs
Urban Outposts of Imperial Power
The Prefectures
The Houses of the Imperial Aristocracy
A Civic Theatre of Imperial Power
Imperial and Sacred Space
Further Reading
Notes
9: Residential Constantinople
Literary Sources
Terminology
Imperial Residences
Elite Residences
Non-elite Residences
Monasteries
Jewish Residences
Merchant Quarters
Archaeological Evidence
Elite Residences
Imperial Residences
Further Reading
Notes
10: Commercial Constantinople
Late Antiquity, Fourth through Seventh Centuries
An Economic Powerhouse, Seventh through Twelfth Centuries
Controlled Development, Ninth and Tenth Centuries
An Expanding Market, Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries
Part of a Larger Whole, Thirteenth through Fifteenth Centuries
Further Reading
Notes
11: Sacred Dimensions: Church Building and Ecclesiastical Practice
Church Architecture in Constantinople
Architecture and Liturgy in Late Antique Constantinople
Medieval Developments
Burials and Commemorations
Beyond Architecture and Liturgy
The Church Building as a Theological Abstraction
Conclusion
Further Reading
Notes
12: Sacred Dimensions: Constantinopolitan Monasticism
Early Period: Fourth through Sixth Centuries
Seventh through Ninth Centuries
Tenth through Twelfth Centuries
Further Reading
Notes
13: Sacred Dimensions: Death and Burial
Further Reading
Notes
Part IV Institutions and Activities
14: The Administration of Constantinople
Beginnings: From Anthypatos (Proconsul) to Eparch of the City
Early Administration: Fourth through Seventh Centuries
Justinian I (527-65) and the Sixth Century
Seventh through Tenth Centuries: The Eparch as 'Pater Poleos'
Evolution and Change: The Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries
The Palaiologan Era: Thirteenth through Fifteenth Centuries
Conclusion
Further Reading
Notes
15: Philanthropic Institutions
Terminology
Origins
From Arianism to Orthodoxy
The Orphanage of Constantinople
The Leprosarium and Ptocheia
Hospitals (Xenones and Gerokomeia)
Conclusion
Further Reading
Notes
16: Schools and Learning
Schools and Teachers
After School
Further Reading
Notes
17: Entertainment
Rhythms of Urban Life
Processions
Hippodrome
On Stage
Diversions of Daily Life
At Home
Further Reading
Notes
Part V Encountering Constantinople
18: Medieval Travellers to Constantinople Wonders and Wonder
Sources
Visitors
Motives
The Sites
Conclusion
Further Reading
Notes
19: Pilgrimage to Constantinople
Further Reading
Notes
20: Encountering and Inventing Constantinople in Early Modern Europe
Further Reading
Notes
21: Byzantium in Early Modern Istanbul
1455: Rupture and Ruin Portrayed
Structures of Space and Thought
Translation, Myth Making, and Facets of Antiquarian Thought
Tangible Past: Monument, Spolia, Replica
Further Reading
Notes
Bibliography
Index