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Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology

 

 

Joukowsky Institute for Archaeology & the Ancient World
Brown University
Box 1837 / 60 George Street
Providence, RI 02912
Telephone: (401) 863-3188
Fax: (401) 863-9423
Joukowsky_Institute@brown.edu

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Printable version: Document IconByzantine Archaeology and art.pdf


Week 1: January 24: Why Byzantium?

Week 2: (January 29 & 31) Pagans and Christians

29 January: The making of a Christian capital?
S. Bassett, ‘The Antiquities in the Hippodrome of Constantinople’, pp. 87-96.
S. Bassett, The Urban image of Late Antique Constantinople, Chapter 1. 

Extra reading for graduate students:
J. Crow, ‘The Infrastructures of a Great City: Earth, walls and water in Late Antique Constantinople’, pp.251-285.

31 January: Classical tradition & Early Christian art
R. Cormack, Byzantine Art, Chapter 1.
C. Mango, ‘Antique Statuary and the Byzantine Beholder’, pp. 55-75.


Extra reading for graduate students:
H. Saradi-Mendelovici, ‘Christian Attitudes toward Pagan Monuments in Late Antiquity and Their Legacy in Later Byzantine Centuries’, pp. 47-61.

Week 3: (February 5 & 7) The late antique world

February 5: The archaeology of the late antique city

W. Liebeschuetz, The end of the ancient city, pp. 1-48.

For the group presentations choose one of the following readings:

• C. Foss, Ephesus After Antiquity: A Late Antique, Byzantine, and Turkish City, pp.46-95. • S. Provost, 'City walls and urban area in late-antique Macedonia: the case of Philippi', pp. 123-136. • J. Crow, 'Fortifications and urbanism in late antiquity: Thessaloniki and other eastern cities', pp. 89-106. • L. Zavagno, Cities in Transition, Chapter 2 (Athens) • W. Bowden and J. Mitchell, 'The Triconch palace at Butrint', pp. 455-76.

Extra reading for graduate students:

L. Lavan, Recent research in late-antique urbanism, pp. 9-26.

*Group presentations on late antique cities/regions*

February 7: The late antique rural landscape
N. Christie, Landscapes of Change: Rural Evolutions in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages, Chapter 1.
B. Caseau, ‘The Fate of Rural Temples in Late Antiquity and the Christianization of the Countryside’, pp.105-144.


Extra reading for graduate students:
G.D. R. Sanders, ‘Problems in interpreting rural and urban settlements in Southern Greece, AD 365–700’, pp. 163–193.

Week 4: (February 12 & 14) Architecture, monumentality and political propaganda

February 12: Monumentality and propaganda in the time of Justinian
R. Cormack, Byzantine Art, Chapter 2.
E. Zanini, ‘The urban ideal and urban planning in Byzantine new cities of the sixth century AD', pp. 196-223.


Extra reading for graduate students:
A. Brown, ‘Justinian, Procopius, and deception: Literary lies, imperial politics, and the archaeology of sixth-century Greece’, pp. 355-69.

February 14: Power, art and imperial imagery *Class will meet in the new digital scholarship lab at the Rockefeller Library*
A. Walker, The Emperor and the World, Chapter II.
H. Maguire, ‘Heavenly court’ pp. 247-258.


Extra reading for graduate students:
Alicia Walker, The Emperor and the World, Chapter IV.

*Individual presentations and group discussion on the byzantine material culture and political propaganda*


Week 5 (February 19 & 21): The material culture of pilgrimage

February 19: NO CLASSES

February 21
A. Weyl Carr, ‘Icons and the Object of Pilgrimage in Middle Byzantine Constantinople’, pp. 75-92.
C. Foss, ‘Pilgrimage in Medieval Asia Minor’, pp. 129-151.


Extra reading for graduate students:
S. Coleman & J. Eisner, ‘The pilgrim's progress: Art, architecture and ritual movement at Sinai’, pp. 73-89.

Week 6 (February 26 & 28) Trade, markets, merchants

February 26
M. Mango, ‘Byzantine trade: local, regional, interregional and international’, pp. 3-14.
B. Pitarakis, 'Daily Life in the Marketplace in Late Antiquity and Byzantium', pp. 399-426.


Extra reading for graduate students:
D. Jacoby, ‘Silk Economics and Cross-Cultural Artistic Interaction: Byzantium, the Muslim World, and the Christian West’, pp. 197-240.

February 28: MIDTERM


Week 7 (March 5 & 7) Symbolism and meaning in Byzantine architecture and art

March 5: Form and meaning in Byzantine church architecture
R. Ousterhout, ‘The Holy Space: Architecture Serves the Liturgy,’ pp.81-120.
H. Maguire, ‘The Cycle of Images in the Church’, pp. 122-151.


Extra reading for graduate students:
D.L. Chatford Clark, ‘Viewing the liturgy: a space syntax study of changing visibility and accessibility in the development of the Byzantine church in Jordan’, pp. 84-104.

March 7: Iconoclasm and the triumph of icons
R.Cormack, Writing in Gold. Byzantine Society and its Icons, Chapter 3.


Extra reading for graduate students:
L. Brubaker, ‘Icons and Iconomachy’, pp. 323-337.

Week 8 (March 12 & 14): Ritual, piety and artistic patronage

March 12: Experiencing the icon
A. Kartsonis, ‘The Responding Icon’, pp. 58-80.

N. Patterson Ševčenko, ‘Icons in the Liturgy’, pp. 45-57.


Extra reading for graduate students:
B.V. Pentcheva, ‘The Performative Icon’, pp. 631-655.

March 14: Artistic Patronage in Byzantium
V. Dimitropoulou, ‘Giving Gifts to God: Aspects of Patronage in Byzantine Art’, pp. 161-170.
R. Ousterhout, Master builders of Byzantium, Chapter 2.


Extra reading for graduate students:
A. Weyl Carr, ‘Donors in the Frames of Icons: Living in the Borders of Byzantine Art’, pp. 189-198.

Week 9 (March 19 & 21) The Byzantine City

March 19: THE CITY
P. Magdalino, 'Medieval Constantinople: Built Environment and Urban Development’, pp. 529-537.
C. Mango, ‘The development of Constantinople as an urban center’, pp. 1- 20.


Extra reading for graduate students:
R. Ousterhout, ‘Constantinople and the construction of a medieval urban identity’, pp. 334-351.

March 21: Each city has its own history *Class will meet in the new digital scholarship lab at the Rockefeller Library*
C. Bouras, ‘Aspects of the Byzantine City, Eighth--Fifteenth Centuries’, pp. 487-518.
Students must choose one of the following case studies: G. D. R. Sanders, ‘Corinth’, pp.633-640; C. Foss and J. Ayer Scott, ‘Sardis’, pp. 602-609; K. Rheidt, ‘The Urban Economy of Pergamon’, pp. 610-616; A. Louvi-Kizi, ‘Thebes’, pp. 617-624; M. Kazanaki-Lappa, ‘Medieval Athens’, pp. 625-632.


*Group presentations on Byzantine cities*

March 23-31 Spring Break

Week 10 (April 2 & 4) The Byzantine landscape

April 2: Byzantine fortifications
T. Gregory, ‘The Fortified Cities of Byzantine Greece’, pp. 14-21.
C. Foss and D. Winfield, Byzantine Fortifications: An Introduction, Chapter 3.


Extra reading for graduate students:
N. Bakirtzis, ‘The practice, perception and experience of Byzantine fortification’, pp. 352-371.

April 4: The Byzantine village
M. Rautman, ‘The villages of Byzantine Cyprus’, pp. 453-63.
L. Safran, ‘The Art of Veneration: Saints and Villages in the Salento and the Mani’, pp. 179-190.


Extra reading for graduate students:
K. Rheidt, ‘City or Village? Housing and Settlement in Middle and Late Byzantine Anatolia’, pp. 221-232.


Week 11 (April 9 & 11) Living spaces April 9: The Byzantine house
L. Sigalos, ‘Housing People in Medieval Greece’, pp. 195-221.
C. Bouras, ‘Houses in Byzantium’, pp. 1-26.


Extra reading for graduate students:
N. Oikonomides, ‘The Contents of the Byzantine House from the Eleventh to the Fifteenth Century’, pp. 205-214.

April 11: Monastic spaces

J. Patrich, ‘Monastic landscapes’, pp. 413-445.
S. Popović, ‘Dividing the indivisible: The monastery space – secular and sacred’, pp. 47-60.


Extra reading for graduate students:
A. M. Talbot, 'Women's Space in Byzantine Monasteries', pp. 113-127.

Week 12 (April 16 & 18) Looking to the West before and after the Crusades

April 16: Artistic interaction between East and West
K. Weitzmann, ‘Thirteenth Century Crusader Icons on Mount Sinai’, pp. 179-203.
A. Weyl Carr, ‘Byzantines and Italians on Cyprus: Images from Art’, pp. 339-357.


Extra reading for graduate students:
H.A. Klein, ‘Refashioning Byzantium in Venice, 1200-1400’, pp. 193-226.

April 18: Frankish Greece
C. Kaufman Williams, 'Frankish Corinth: An Overview', pp. 423-434.
P. Lock, ‘The Frankish Towers of Central Greece’, pp. 101-123.
J. Bintliff, 'The Archaeology of Frankish- Crusader Greece', pp. 416-435.


Extra reading for graduate students:
S. Gerstel et al. 'A Late Medieval Settlement at Panakton’, pp. 147-234.

Week 13 (April 23& 25) Material Culture and Identity in Late Byzantium

April 23: Late Byzantine art & architecture
R. Cormack, Byzantine art, Chapter 6.
R. Ousterhout, ‘Contextualizing the Later Churches of Constantinople: Suggested Methodologies and a Few Examples’, pp. 241-250.


Extra reading for graduate students:
A. Eastmond, Art and Identity in Thirteenth-Century Byzantium: Hagia Sophia and the Empire of Trebizond, pp. 97-116.

April 25: The late Byzantine city
K.P. Matschke, ‘Builders and Building in Late Byzantine Constantinople’, pp. 315-328.
C. Bakirtzis, ‘The Urban Continuity and Size of Late Byzantine Thessalonike’, pp. 35-64.


Extra reading for graduate students:
C. Morrisson, ‘The Emperor, the Saint, and the City: Coinage and Money in Thessalonike from the Thirteenth to the Fifteenth Century’, pp. 173-203.

Week 14- Course review (April 30)

29/4-4/5= READING PERIOD