Book contents
- Frontmatter
- General Introduction
- Part I The Earlier Empire c. 500–c. 700
- Part II The Middle Empire c. 700–1204
- 5 State of Emergency (700–850)
- 6 After Iconoclasm (850–886)
- 7 Religious Missions
- 8 Armenian Neighbours (600–1045)
- 9 Confronting Islam: Emperors Versus Caliphs (641–c. 850)
- 10 Western Approaches (700–900)
- 11 Byzantine Italy (680–876)
- 12 The Middle Byzantine Economy (600–1204)
- 13 Equilibrium to Expansion (886–1025)
- 14 Western Approaches (900–1025)
- 15 Byzantium and Southern Italy (876–1000)
- 16 Belle Époque or Crisis? (1025–1118)
- 17 The Empire of the Komnenoi (1118–1204)
- 18 Balkan Borderlands (1018–1204)
- 19 Raiders and Neighbours: The Turks (1040–1304)
- Part III The Byzantine Lands in the Later Middle Ages 1204–1492
- Glossary (Including some Proper Names)
- Genealogical Tables and Lists of Rulers
- List of alternative place names
- Bibliography
- Picture Acknowledgements
- Index
- References
10 - Western Approaches (700–900)
from Part II - The Middle Empire c. 700–1204
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2010
- Frontmatter
- General Introduction
- Part I The Earlier Empire c. 500–c. 700
- Part II The Middle Empire c. 700–1204
- 5 State of Emergency (700–850)
- 6 After Iconoclasm (850–886)
- 7 Religious Missions
- 8 Armenian Neighbours (600–1045)
- 9 Confronting Islam: Emperors Versus Caliphs (641–c. 850)
- 10 Western Approaches (700–900)
- 11 Byzantine Italy (680–876)
- 12 The Middle Byzantine Economy (600–1204)
- 13 Equilibrium to Expansion (886–1025)
- 14 Western Approaches (900–1025)
- 15 Byzantium and Southern Italy (876–1000)
- 16 Belle Époque or Crisis? (1025–1118)
- 17 The Empire of the Komnenoi (1118–1204)
- 18 Balkan Borderlands (1018–1204)
- 19 Raiders and Neighbours: The Turks (1040–1304)
- Part III The Byzantine Lands in the Later Middle Ages 1204–1492
- Glossary (Including some Proper Names)
- Genealogical Tables and Lists of Rulers
- List of alternative place names
- Bibliography
- Picture Acknowledgements
- Index
- References
Summary
introduction
The early medieval societies of Byzantium and western Europe that emerged from the late Roman world shared more than a few institutions, traditions and religious experiences. They sometimes rubbed shoulders in ways we overlook. Rome’s clerical elite was so hellenised that the pope who reigned at Charlemagne’s birth spoke Greek as his mother tongue. Under Charlemagne’s grandsons, members of the Byzantine missionary Methodios’ entourage wrote Greek majuscules in the memorial book of a German monastery to record their stay; Methodios was himself a native of Thessaloniki, formerly a Byzantine imperial official in Macedonia and a monk in Bithynia (see above, p. 300). Conversely, Franks served in the Byzantine emperor’s military household and figured at palace banquets.
Facts like these raise the broader question of how the two main entities of Christendom interacted over the six or seven generations from c. 700 to c. 900. The historical problem is not without snares. ‘Influence’ can be misleading: interaction between cultures rarely has one society passively undergoing the active influence of another. Once something is available, the borrowing civilisation must take the initiative in appropriating it from the other culture. So when, where and how Byzantium and the west came into direct or indirect contact needs clarifying. Moreover, though these early medieval societies evolved away from their late antique roots, those common roots are everywhere discernible, and it is easy to mistake residual for recent borrowing. Indeed, the shared matrix could give rise to structural parallels, that is, similar developments that arose independently in each culture.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of the Byzantine Empire c.500–1492 , pp. 395 - 432Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
References
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