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Material Culture and Well-Being in Byzantium (400‒1453)

Material Culture and Well-Being in Byzantium (400‒1453)
Proceedings of the International Conference (Cambridge, 8-10 September 2001)
1. Auflage, 2007
Studies on everyday life commonly focus on housing conditions, eating and drinking, clothing, hygiene and medical care, professions, land and sea communications, and generally, on production and consumption. Material objects are dominant in these areas; nevertheless, mental aspects can also frequently be considered the carrier and/or symbol of concepts or values. For this reason, an international symposium held in Cambridge in 2001, which counted the Viennese Institute of Byzantine Studies among its organizers, was intent upon including the concept of "well-being" in its multi-facetted aspects, in the material, legal and philosophical-religious dialogue.
Supported by: Fonds zur Förderung der wissenschaftlichen Forschung (FWF) - Selbstständige Publikationen
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Aims and Structure of the Conference - Acknowledgements
Page 15 - 18
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Proceedings of the Conference
Page 19 - 20
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Introduction. Studies on Material Culture – Some General Considerations
Page 21 - 38
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The Medical Saints of the Orthodox Church in Byzantine Art
Page 41 - 50
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The Man in the Street: Some problems of gender and identity in Byzantine material culture
Page 51 - 56
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Byzantine Town Planning – Does it Exist?
Hans Buchwald
Page 57 - 74
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Incense and Fragrances: from House to Church. A Study of the Introduction of Incense in the Early Byzantine Christian Churches
Page 75 - 92
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The Effect of Medicine, in particular the Ideas about Renal Diseases, on the “Well-being” of Byzantine Citizens
Page 93 - 100
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Rural Producers and Markets: Aspects of the Archaeological and Historiographic Problem
Page 101 - 110
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Byzantium in London? New Archaeological Evidence for 11th Century Links between England and the Byzantine World
Page 111 - 118
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Religious Imagery in Mystra. Donors and Iconographic Programmes
Page 119 - 128
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Surgery in Byzantium
Page 129 - 134
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Spartans and Sybarites at the Golden Horn. Food as Necessity and/or luxury
Page 135 - 140
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Life in the Monastic Community: the Living Tradition of the Desert Fathers
Page 141 - 146
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Being and Well-Being in Byzantium: The Case of Beverages
Page 147 - 154
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Introduction to Material Culture in the Byzantine and Christian Museum, Athens
Page 155 - 158
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Textiles and Dress in Byzantium
Page 159 - 170
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Galen in Byzantium
Page 171 - 176
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The Byzantine Tradition on the Decoration of a 17th Century Sakkos (Inv. No 754) in the Byzantine and Christian Museum, Athens
Page 177 - 180
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Byzantine Material Culture and Religious Iconography
Maria G. Parani
Page 181 - 192
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The Most Precious Thread in Byzantium and Medieval Serbia
Page 193 - 198
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The Byzantine House (400–912): Rules and Representations
Page 199 - 206
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Magic and the Warding-off of Barbarians in Constantinople, 9th -12th Centuries
Page 207 - 210
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To Have and to Have not: Supply and Shortage in the Centres of the Late Antique World
Page 211 - 218
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The terminology of Egyptian monastic garments
Page 219 - 224
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Closing address: ‘Invisible Byzantiums’
Page 225 - 234
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Edition:
978-3-7001-3602-6, Print, softcover, 31.10.2007
Edition:
978-3-7001-4041-2, eBook, Digital, 31.10.2007
Edition:
1. Auflage
Pages:
239 Pages
Format:
30x21cm
Images:
37 plates with b/w and colour images
Language:
English
DOI (Link to Online Edition):

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