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Byzantine Greeks

The Byzantine Greeks were the Greek-speaking Eastern Romans of Orthodox Christianity throughout Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages.[1] They were the main inhabitants of the lands of the Byzantine Empire (Eastern Roman Empire), of Constantinople and Asia Minor (modern Turkey), the Greek islands, Cyprus, and portions of the southern Balkans, and formed large minorities, or pluralities, in the coastal urban centres of the Levant and northern Egypt. Throughout their history, the Byzantine Greeks self-identified as Romans (Greek: Ῥωμαῖοι, romanizedRhōmaîoi), but are referred to as "Byzantine Greeks" in modern historiography. Latin speakers identified them simply as Greeks or with the term Romei.

Byzantine Greeks
Ῥωμαῖοι
Scenes of agricultural life in a Byzantine Gospel of the 11th century.
Regions with significant populations
Byzantine Empire (esp. Asia Minor, Balkans)
Languages
Medieval Greek
Religion
Eastern Orthodox Christianity
Related ethnic groups
Ottoman Greeks, Greeks

The social structure of the Byzantine Greeks was primarily supported by a rural, agrarian base that consisted of the peasantry, and a small fraction of the poor. These peasants lived within three kinds of settlements: the chorion or village, the agridion or hamlet, and the proasteion or estate. Many civil disturbances that occurred during the time of the Byzantine Empire were attributed to political factions within the Empire rather than to this large popular base. Soldiers among the Byzantine Greeks were at first conscripted amongst the rural peasants and trained on an annual basis. As the Byzantine Empire entered the 11th century, more of the soldiers within the army were either professional men-at-arms or mercenaries.

Until the thirteenth century, education within the Byzantine Greek population was more advanced than in the West, particularly at primary school level, resulting in comparatively high literacy rates. Success came easily to Byzantine Greek merchants, who enjoyed a very strong position in international trade. Despite the challenges posed by rival Italian merchants, they held their own throughout the latter half of the Byzantine Empire's existence. The clergy also held a special place, not only having more freedom than their Western counterparts, but also maintaining a patriarch in Constantinople who was considered the equivalent of the pope. This position of strength had built up over time, for at the beginning of the Byzantine Empire, under Emperor Constantine the Great (r. 306–337), only a small part, about 10%, of the population was Christian.

Use of the Greek language was already widespread in the eastern parts of the Roman empire when Constantine moved its capital to Constantinople, although Latin was the language of the imperial administration. From the reign of Emperor Heraclius (r. 610–641), Greek was the predominant language amongst the populace and also replaced Latin in administration. At first, the Byzantine Empire had a multi-ethnic character, but following the loss of the non-Greek speaking provinces with the 7th century Muslim conquests it came to be dominated by the Byzantine Greeks, who inhabited the heartland of the later empire: modern Cyprus, Greece, Turkey, and Sicily, and portions of southern Bulgaria, Crimea, and Albania. Over time, the relationship between them and the West, particularly with Latin Europe, deteriorated.

Relations were further damaged by a schism between the Catholic West and Orthodox East that led to the Byzantine Greeks being labeled as heretics in the West. Throughout the later centuries of the Byzantine Empire and particularly following the imperial coronation of the King of the Franks, Charlemagne (r. 768–814), in Rome in 800, the Byzantines were not considered by Western Europeans as heirs of the Roman Empire, but rather as part of an Eastern Greek kingdom.

As the Byzantine Empire declined, the Roman identity survived until its fall in 1453 and beyond. The Ottomans used the designation "Rûm" ("Roman") distinctly for the Ottoman Greeks and the term "Rum millet" ("Roman nation") for all the Eastern Orthodox populations.[2] It was kept by both Ottoman Greeks and their Ottoman overlords throughout the years of the Ottoman rule, increasingly transforming into an ethnic identity, marked by Greek language and adherence to Orthodox Christianity, a precursor that shaped the modern Greek ethnic identity.[3][4] The self-identity as Roman among the Greeks only began to lose ground by the time of the Greek Revolution, when multiple factors saw the name 'Hellene' rise to replace it, given the prior revival as self-identification from the 13th century onward by the Nicaenean elite and in the intellectual circles by Georgios Gemistos Plethon and John Argyropoulos, that sowed the seed for it.[5] Today, the modern Greek people still sometimes use, in addition to the terms "Greeks" and "Hellenes", the Byzantine term "Romaioi," or "Romioi," ("Romans") to refer to themselves, as well as the term "Romaic" ("Roman") to refer to their Modern Greek language.[6][7]

Terminology

 
The double-headed eagle, emblem of the Palaiologos dynasty.

During most of the Middle Ages, the Byzantine Greeks self-identified as Rhōmaîoi (Ῥωμαῖοι, "Romans", meaning citizens of the Roman Empire), a term which in the Greek language had become synonymous with Christian Greeks.[8][9] The Latinizing term Graikoí (Γραικοί, "Greeks") was also used,[10] though its use was less common, and nonexistent in official Byzantine political correspondence, prior to the Fourth Crusade of 1204.[11] While this Latin term for the ancient Hellenes could be used neutrally, its use by Westerners from the 9th century onwards in order to challenge Byzantine claims to ancient Roman heritage rendered it a derogatory exonym for the Byzantines who barely used it, mostly in contexts relating to the West, such as texts relating to the Council of Florence, to present the Western viewpoint.[12][13] The ancient name Hellenes was synonymous to "pagan" in popular use, but was revived as an ethnonym in the Middle Byzantine period (11th century).[14]

While in the West the term "Roman" acquired a new meaning in connection with the Catholic Church and the Bishop of Rome, the Greek form "Romaioi" remained attached to the Greeks of the Eastern Roman Empire.[15] The term "Byzantine Greeks" is an exonym applied by later historians like Hieronymus Wolf; "Byzantine" citizens continued to call themselves Romaioi (Romans) in their language.[16] Despite the shift in terminology in the West, the Byzantines Empire's eastern neighbors, such as the Arabs, continued to refer to the Byzantines as "Romans", as for instance in the 30th Surah of the Quran (Ar-Rum).[17] The signifier "Roman" (Rum millet, "Roman nation") was also used by the Byzantines' later Ottoman rivals, and its Turkish equivalent Rûm, "Roman", continues to be used officially by the government of Turkey to denote the Greek Orthodox natives (Rumlar) of Istanbul, as well as the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople (Turkish: Rum Ortodoks Patrikhanesi, "Roman Orthodox Patriarchate"[18]).[19]

Among Slavic populations of southeast Europe, such as Bulgarians and Serbs the name "Rhomaioi" (Romans) in their languages was most commonly translated as "Greki" (Greeks). Some Slavonic texts during the early medieval era also used the terms Rimljani or Romei.[20] In medieval Bulgarian sources the Byzantine Emperors were the "Tsars of the Greeks" and the Byzantine Empire was known as "Tsardom of the Greeks". Both rulers of the Despotate of Epirus and the Empire of Nicaea were also "Greek tsars ruling over Greek people".[21]

Equally, among the Nordic people such as the Icelanders, Varangians (Vikings) and other Scandinavian people, the "Rhomaioi" (Romans) were called "Grikkr" (Greeks). There are various runic inscriptions left in Norway, Sweden and even in Athens by travellers and members of the Varangian Guard like the Greece runestones and the Piraeus Lion which we meet the terms Grikkland (Greece) and Grikkr referring to their ventures in Byzantine Empire and their interaction with the Byzantines.[22]

Society

While social mobility was not unknown in Byzantium the order of society was thought of as more enduring, with the average man regarding the court of Heaven to be the archetype of the imperial court in Constantinople.[23] This society included various classes of people that were neither exclusive nor immutable. The most characteristic were the poor, the peasants, the soldiers, the teachers, entrepreneurs, and clergy.[23]

The poor

According to a text dated to AD 533, a man was termed "poor" if he did not have 50 gold coins (aurei), which was a modest though not negligible sum.[24] The Byzantines were heirs to the Greek concepts of charity for the sake of the polis; nevertheless it was the Christian concepts attested in the Bible that animated their giving habits,[25] and specifically the examples of Basil of Caesarea (who is the Greek equivalent of Santa Claus), Gregory of Nyssa, and John Chrysostom.[25] The number of the poor fluctuated in the many centuries of Byzantium's existence, but they provided a constant supply of muscle power for the building projects and rural work. Their numbers apparently increased in the late fourth and early fifth centuries as barbarian raids and a desire to avoid taxation pushed rural populations into cities.[26]

Since Homeric times, there were several categories of poverty: the ptochos (πτωχός, "passive poor") was lower than the penes (πένης, "active poor").[27] They formed the majority of the infamous Constantinopolitan mob whose function was similar to the mob of the First Rome. However, while there are instances of riots attributed to the poor, the majority of civil disturbances were specifically attributable to the various factions of the Hippodrome like the Greens and Blues.[28] The poor made up a non-negligible percentage of the population, but they influenced the Christian society of Byzantium to create a large network of hospitals (iatreia, ιατρεία) and almshouses, and a religious and social model largely justified by the existence of the poor and born out of the Christian transformation of classical society.[29]

Peasantry

Byzantine state and society relied on the Hellenistic system of joint tax liability due to the easy handling, fast and simple revenue for the state from the different towns and villages chorio, komai mostly made up of peasants, who were the main income.[30] There are no reliable figures as to the numbers of the peasantry, yet it is widely assumed that the vast majority of Byzantine Greeks lived in rural and agrarian areas.[31] In the Taktika of Emperor Leo VI the Wise (r. 886–912), the two professions defined as the backbone of the state are the peasantry (geōrgikē, γεωργική, "farmers") and the soldiers (stratiōtikē, στρατιωτική).[31]

Peasants lived mostly in villages, whose name changed slowly from the classical kome (κώμη) to the modern chorio (χωριό).[32] While agriculture and herding were the dominant occupations of villagers they were not the only ones.[32] There are records for the small town of Lampsakos, situated on the eastern shore of the Hellespont, which out of 173 households classifies 113 as peasant and 60 as urban, which indicate other kinds of ancillary activities.[32]

The Treatise on Taxation, preserved in the Biblioteca Marciana in Venice, distinguishes between three types of rural settlements, the chorion (Greek: χωρίον) or village, the agridion (Greek: αγρίδιον) or hamlet, and the proasteion (Greek: προάστειον) or estate.[32] According to a 14th-century survey of the village of Aphetos, donated to the monastery of Chilandar, the average size of a landholding is only 3.5 modioi (0.08 ha).[33] Taxes placed on rural populations included the kapnikon (Greek: καπνικόν) or hearth tax, the synone (Greek: συνονή) or cash payment frequently affiliated with the kapnikon, the ennomion (Greek: εννόμιον) or pasture tax, and the aerikon (Greek: αέρικον, meaning "of the air") which depended on the village's population and ranged between 4 and 20 gold coins annually.[34]

Their diet consisted of mainly grains and beans and in fishing communities fish was usually substituted for meat.[35] Bread, wine, and olives were important staples of Byzantine diet with soldiers on campaign eating double-baked and dried bread called paximadion (Greek: παξιμάδιον).[36] As in antiquity and modern times, the most common cultivations in the choraphia (Greek: χωράφια) were olive groves and vineyards. While Liutprand of Cremona, a visitor from Italy, found Greek wine irritating as it was often flavoured with resin (retsina) most other Westerners admired Greek wines, Cretan in particular being famous.[37]

While both hunting and fishing were common, the peasants mostly hunted to protect their herds and crops.[38] Apiculture, the keeping of bees, was as highly developed in Byzantium as it had been in Ancient Greece.[39] Aside from agriculture, the peasants also laboured in the crafts, fiscal inventories mentioning smiths (Greek: χαλκεύς, chalkeus), tailors (Greek: ράπτης, rhaptes), and cobblers (Greek: τζαγγάριος, tzangarios).[39]

Soldiers

 
Joshua portrayed as a soldier wearing the lamellar klivanion cuirass and a straight spathion sword (Hosios Loukas).

During the Byzantine millennium, hardly a year passed without a military campaign. Soldiers were a normal part of everyday life, much more so than in modern Western societies.[40] While it is difficult to draw a distinction between Roman and Byzantine soldiers from an organizational aspect, it is easier to do so in terms of their social profile.[40] The military handbooks known as the Taktika continued a Hellenistic and Roman tradition, and contain a wealth of information about the appearance, customs, habits, and life of the soldiers.[41]

As with the peasantry, many soldiers performed ancillary activities, like medics and technicians.[42] Selection for military duty was annual with yearly call-ups and great stock was placed on military exercises, during the winter months, which formed a large part of a soldier's life.[43]

Until the 11th century, the majority of the conscripts were from rural areas, while the conscription of craftsmen and merchants is still an open question.[44] From then on, professional recruiting replaced conscription, and the increasing use of mercenaries in the army was ruinous for the treasury.[44] From the 10th century onwards, there were laws connecting land ownership and military service. While the state never allotted land for obligatory service, soldiers could and did use their pay to buy landed estates, and taxes would be decreased or waived in some cases.[45] What the state did allocate to soldiers, however, from the 12th century onwards, were the tax revenues from some estates called pronoiai (πρόνοιαι). As in antiquity, the basic food of the soldier remained the dried biscuit bread, though its name had changed from boukelaton (βουκελάτον) to paximadion.

Teachers

 
A page of 5th or 6th century Iliad like the one a grammarian might possess.

Byzantine education was the product of an ancient Greek educational tradition that stretched back to the 5th century BC.[46] It comprised a tripartite system of education that, taking shape during the Hellenistic era, was maintained, with inevitable changes, up until the fall of Constantinople.[46] The stages of education were the elementary school, where pupils ranged from six to ten years, secondary school, where pupils ranged from ten to sixteen, and higher education.[47]

Elementary education was widely available throughout most of the Byzantine Empire's existence, in towns and occasionally in the countryside.[47] This, in turn, ensured that literacy was much more widespread than in Western Europe, at least until the twelfth century.[47][48] Secondary education was confined to the larger cities while higher education was the exclusive provenance of Constantinople.[47]

Though not a society of mass literacy like modern societies, Byzantine society was a profoundly literate one.[49] Based on information from an extensive array of Byzantine documents from different periods (i.e. homilies, Ecloga, etc.), Robert Browning concluded that, while books were luxury items and functional literacy (reading and writing) was widespread, but largely confined to cities and monasteries, access to elementary education was provided in most cities for much of the time and sometimes in villages.[50] Nikolaos Oikonomides, focusing on 13th-century Byzantine literacy in Western Asia Minor, states that Byzantine society had "a completely literate church, an almost completely literate aristocracy, some literate horsemen, rare literate peasants and almost completely illiterate women."[51] Ioannis Stouraitis estimates that the percentage of the Empire's population with some degree of literacy was at most 15–20% based primarily on the mention of illiterate Byzantine tourmarchai in the Tactica of Emperor Leo VI the Wise (r. 886–912).[52]

In Byzantium, the elementary school teacher occupied a low social position and taught mainly from simple fairy tale books (Aesop's Fables were often used).[53] However, the grammarian and rhetorician, teachers responsible for the following two phases of education, were more respected.[53] These used classical Greek texts like Homer's Iliad or Odyssey and much of their time was taken with detailed word-for-word explication.[53] Books were rare and very expensive and likely only possessed by teachers who dictated passages to students.[54]

Women

 
Scenes of marriage and family life in Constantinople.

Women have tended to be overlooked in Byzantine studies as Byzantine society left few records about them.[55] Women were disadvantaged in some aspects of their legal status and in their access to education, and limited in their freedom of movement.[56] The life of a Byzantine Greek woman could be divided into three phases: girlhood, motherhood, and widowhood.[57]

Childhood was brief and perilous, even more so for girls than boys.[57] Parents would celebrate the birth of a boy twice as much and there is some evidence of female infanticide (i.e. roadside abandonment and suffocation), though it was contrary to both civil and canon law.[57] Educational opportunities for girls were few: they did not attend regular schools but were taught in groups at home by tutors.[58] With few exceptions, education was limited to literacy and the Bible; a famous exception is the princess Anna Komnene (1083–1153), whose Alexiad displays a great depth of erudition, and the renowned 9th century Byzantine poet and composer Kassiani.[59] The majority of a young girl's daily life would be spent in household and agrarian chores, preparing herself for marriage.[59]

For most girls, childhood came to an end with the onset of puberty, which was followed shortly after by betrothal and marriage.[60] Although marriage arranged by the family was the norm, romantic love was not unknown.[60] Most women bore many children but few survived infancy, and grief for the loss of a loved one was an inalienable part of life.[61] The main form of birth control was abstinence, and while there is evidence of contraception it seems to have been mainly used by prostitutes.[62]

Due to prevailing norms of modesty, women would wear clothing that covered the whole of their body except their hands.[63] While women among the poor sometimes wore sleeveless tunics, most women were obliged to cover even their hair with the long maphorion (μαφόριον) veil. Women of means, however, spared no expense in adorning their clothes with exquisite jewelry and fine silk fabrics.[63] Divorces were hard to obtain even though there were laws permitting them.[64] Husbands would often beat their wives, though the reverse was not unknown, as in Theodore Prodromos's description of a battered husband in the Ptochoprodromos poems.[64]

Although female life expectancy in Byzantium was lower than that of men, due to death in childbirth, wars and the fact that men married younger, female widowhood was still fairly common.[64] Still, some women were able to circumvent societal strictures and work as traders, artisans, abbots, entertainers, and scholars.[65]

Entrepreneurs

 
Gold solidus of Justinian II 4.42 grams (0.156 oz), struck after 692.[66]

The traditional image of Byzantine Greek merchants as unenterprising benefactors of state aid is beginning to change for that of mobile, pro-active agents.[67] The merchant class, particularly that of Constantinople, became a force of its own that could, at times, even threaten the Emperor as it did in the eleventh and twelfth centuries.[68] This was achieved through efficient use of credit and other monetary innovations. Merchants invested surplus funds in financial products called chreokoinonia (χρεοκοινωνία), the equivalent and perhaps ancestor of the later Italian commenda.[68]

Eventually, the purchasing power of Byzantine merchants became such that it could influence prices in markets as far afield as Cairo and Alexandria.[67] In reflection of their success, emperors gave merchants the right to become members of the Senate, that is to integrate themselves with the ruling elite.[69] This had an end by the end of the eleventh century when political machinations allowed the landed aristocracy to secure the throne for a century and more.[69] Following that phase, however, the enterprising merchants bounced back and wielded real clout during the time of the Third Crusade.[70]

The reason Byzantine Greek merchants have often been neglected in historiography is not that they were any less able than their ancient or modern Greek colleagues in matters of trade. It rather originated with the way history was written in Byzantium, which was often under the patronage of their competitors, the court, and land aristocracy.[70] The fact that they were eventually surpassed by their Italian rivals is attributable to the privileges sought and acquired by the Crusader States within the Levant and the dominant maritime violence of the Italians.[70]

Clergy

Unlike in Western Europe where priests were clearly demarcated from the laymen, the clergy of the Eastern Roman Empire remained in close contact with the rest of society.[71] Readers and subdeacons were drawn from the laity and expected to be at least twenty years of age while priests and bishops had to be at least 30.[71] Unlike the Latin church, the Byzantine church allowed married priests and deacons, as long as they were married before ordination. Bishops, however, were required to be unmarried.[71]

While the religious hierarchy mirrored the Empire's administrative divisions, the clergy were more ubiquitous than the emperor's servants.[72] The issue of caesaropapism, while usually associated with the Byzantine Empire, is now understood to be an oversimplification of actual conditions in the Empire.[73] By the fifth century, the Patriarch of Constantinople was recognized as first among equals of the four eastern Patriarchs and as of equal status with the Pope in Rome.[71]

The ecclesiastical provinces were called eparchies and were headed by archbishops or metropolitans who supervised their subordinate bishops or episkopoi. For most people, however, it was their parish priest or papas (from the Greek word for "father") that was the most recognizable face of the clergy.[71][74]

Culture

Language

 

The Eastern Roman Empire was in language and civilization a Greek society.[75] Linguistically, Byzantine or medieval Greek is situated between the Hellenistic (Koine) and modern phases of the language.[76] Since as early as the Hellenistic era, Greek had been the lingua franca of the educated elites of the Eastern Mediterranean, spoken natively in the southern Balkans, the Greek islands, Asia Minor, and the ancient and Hellenistic Greek colonies of Southern Italy, the Black Sea, Western Asia and North Africa.[77] At the beginning of the Byzantine millennium, the koine (Greek: κοινή) remained the basis for spoken Greek and Christian writings, while Attic Greek was the language of the philosophers and orators.[78]

As Christianity became the dominant religion, Attic began to be used in Christian writings in addition to and often interspersed with koine Greek.[78] Nonetheless, from the 6th at least until the 12th century, Attic remained entrenched in the educational system; while further changes to the spoken language can be postulated for the early and middle Byzantine periods.[78]

The population of the Byzantine Empire, at least in its early stages, had a variety of mother tongues including Greek.[78] These included Latin, Aramaic, Coptic, and Caucasian languages, while Cyril Mango also cites evidence for bilingualism in the south and southeast.[79] These influences, as well as an influx of people of Arabic, Celtic, Germanic, Turkic, and Slavic backgrounds, supplied medieval Greek with many loanwords that have survived in the modern Greek language.[79] From the 11th century onward, there was also a steady rise in the literary use of the vernacular.[79]

Following the Fourth Crusade, there was increased contact with the West; and the lingua franca of commerce became Italian. In the areas of the Crusader kingdoms a classical education (Greek: παιδεία, paideia) ceased to be a sine qua non of social status, leading to the rise of the vernacular.[79] From this era many beautiful works in the vernacular, often written by people deeply steeped in classical education, are attested.[79] A famous example is the four Ptochoprodromic poems attributed to Theodoros Prodromos.[79] From the 13th to the 15th centuries, the last centuries of the Empire, there arose several works, including laments, fables, romances, and chronicles, written outside Constantinople, which until then had been the seat of most literature, in an idiom termed by scholars as "Byzantine Koine".[79]

However, the diglossia of the Greek-speaking world, which had already started in ancient Greece, continued under Ottoman rule and persisted in the modern Greek state until 1976, although Koine Greek remains the official language of the Greek Orthodox Church. As shown in the poems of Ptochoprodromos, an early stage of modern Greek had already been shaped by the 12th century and possibly earlier. Vernacular Greek continued to be known as "Romaic" ("Roman") until the 20th century.[80]

Religion

 
King David in the imperial purple (Paris Psalter).

At the time of Constantine the Great (r. 306–337), barely 10% of the Roman Empire's population were Christians, with most of them being urban population and generally found in the eastern part of the Roman Empire. The majority of people still honoured the old gods in the public Roman way of religio.[81] As Christianity became a complete philosophical system, whose theory and apologetics were heavily indebted to the Classic word, this changed.[82] In addition, Constantine, as Pontifex Maximus, was responsible for the correct cultus or veneratio of the deity which was in accordance with former Roman practice.[83] The move from the old religion to the new entailed some elements of continuity as well as break with the past, though the artistic heritage of paganism was literally broken by Christian zeal.[84]

Christianity led to the development of a few phenomena characteristic of Byzantium. Namely, the intimate connection between Church and State, a legacy of Roman cultus.[84] Also, the creation of a Christian philosophy that guided Byzantine Greeks in their everyday lives.[84] And finally, the dichotomy between the Christian ideals of the Bible and classical Greek paideia which could not be left out, however, since so much of Christian scholarship and philosophy depended on it.[82][84] These shaped Byzantine Greek character and the perceptions of themselves and others.

Christians at the time of Constantine's conversion made up only 10% of the population.[81] This would rise to 50% by the end of the fourth century and 90% by the end of the fifth century.[84] Emperor Justinian I (r. 527–565) then brutally mopped up the rest of the pagans, highly literate academics on one end of the scale and illiterate peasants on the other.[84] A conversion so rapid seems to have been rather the result of expediency than of conviction.[84]

The survival of the Empire in the East assured an active role of the emperor in the affairs of the Church. The Byzantine state inherited from pagan times the administrative and financial routine of organising religious affairs, and this routine was applied to the Christian Church. Following the pattern set by Eusebius of Caesarea, the Byzantines viewed the emperor as a representative or messenger of Christ, responsible particularly for the propagation of Christianity among pagans, and for the "externals" of the religion, such as administration and finances. The imperial role in the affairs of the Church never developed into a fixed, legally defined system, however.[85]

With the decline of Rome, and internal dissension in the other Eastern patriarchates, the church of Constantinople became, between the 6th and 11th centuries, the richest and most influential centre of Christendom.[86] Even when the Byzantine Empire was reduced to only a shadow of its former self, the Church, as an institution, exercised so much influence both inside and outside the imperial frontiers as never before. As George Ostrogorsky points out:[87]

"The Patriarchate of Constantinople remained the center of the Orthodox world, with subordinate metropolitan sees and archbishoprics in the territory of Asia Minor and the Balkans, now lost to Byzantium, as well as in Caucasus, Russia and Lithuania. The Church remained the most stable element in the Byzantine Empire."

In terms of religion, Byzantine Greek Macedonia is also significant as being the home of Saints Cyril and Methodius, two Greek brothers from Thessaloniki (Salonika) who were sent on state-sponsored missions to proselytize among the Slavs of the Balkans and east-central Europe. This involved Cyril and Methodius having to translate the Christian Bible into the Slavs' own language, for which they invented an alphabet that became known as Old Church Slavonic. In the process, this cemented the Greek brothers' status as the pioneers of Slavic literature and those who first introduced Byzantine civilization and Orthodox Christianity to the hitherto illiterate and pagan Slavs.

Identity

Self-perception

 
11th century Hagia Sophia mosaic. On the left, Constantine IX "faithful in Christ the God, Emperor of the Romans".

In modern Byzantine scholarship, there are currently three main schools of thought on medieval eastern Roman identity.

  • First, a school of thought that developed largely under the influence of modern Greek nationalism, treats Roman identity as the medieval form of a perennial Greek national identity. In this view, as heirs to the ancient Greeks and of the Roman state, the Byzantines thought of themselves as Rhomaioi, or Romans, though they knew that they were ethnically Greeks.[88]
  • Second, which could be regarded as preponderant in the field considers "Romanity" the mode of self-identification of the subjects of a multi-ethnic empire at least up to the 12th century, where the average subject identified as Roman.
  • Third, a line of thought argues that the eastern Roman identity was a separate pre-modern national identity.[89] The established consensus in the field of Byzantine studies does not call into question the self-identification of the "Byzantines" as Romans.[90]

The defining traits of being considered one of the Rhomaioi were being an Eastern Orthodox Christian and more importantly speaking Greek, characteristics which had to be acquired by birth if one was not to be considered an allogenes or even a barbarian.[91] The term mostly used to describe someone who was a foreigner to both the Byzantines and their state was ethnikós (Greek: ἐθνικός), a term which originally described non-Jews or non-Christians, but had lost its religious meaning.[92] In a classicizing vein usually applied to other peoples, Byzantine authors regularly referred to their people as "Ausones", an ancient name for the original inhabitants of Italy.[93] Most historians agree that the defining features of their civilization were: 1) Greek language, culture, literature, and science, 2) Roman law and tradition, 3) Christian faith.[94] The Byzantine Greeks were, and perceived themselves as, heirs to the culture of ancient Greece,[95] the political heirs of imperial Rome,[96][97] and followers of the Apostles.[98] Thus, their sense of "Romanity" was different from that of their contemporaries in the West. "Romaic" was the name of the vulgar Greek language, as opposed to "Hellenic" which was its literary or doctrinal form.[99] Being a Roman was mostly a matter of culture and religion rather than speaking Greek or living within Byzantine territory, and had nothing to do with race.[100] Some Byzantines began to use the name Greek (Hellen) with its ancient meaning of someone living in the territory of Greece rather than its usually Christian meaning of "pagan".[100] Realizing that the restored empire held lands of ancient Greeks and had a population largely descended from them, some scholars such as George Gemistos Plethon and John Argyropoulos[101][102][103] put emphasized pagan Greek and Christian Roman past, mostly during a time of Byzantine political decline.[100] However such views were part of a few learned people, and the majority of Byzantine Christians would see them as nonsensical or dangerous.[100] After 1204 the Byzantine successor entities were mostly Greek-speaking but not nation-states like France and England of that time.[100] The risk or reality of foreign rule, not some sort of Greek national consciousness was the primary element that drew contemporary Byzantines together.[100] Byzantine elites and common people nurtured a high self-esteem based on their perceived cultural superiority towards foreigners, whom they viewed with contempt, despite the frequent occurrence of compliments to an individual foreigner as an andreîos Rhōmaióphrōn (ἀνδρεῖος Ῥωμαιόφρων, roughly "a brave Roman-minded fellow").[92] There was always an element of indifference or neglect of everything non-Greek, which was therefore "barbarian".[104]

Official discourse

In official discourse, "all inhabitants of the empire were subjects of the emperor, and therefore Romans." Thus the primary definition of Rhōmaios was "political or statist."[105] In order to succeed in being a full-blown and unquestioned "Roman" it was best to be a Greek Orthodox Christian and a Greek-speaker, at least in one's public persona.[105] Yet, the cultural uniformity which the Byzantine church and the state pursued through Orthodoxy and the Greek language was not sufficient to erase distinct identities, nor did it aim to.[104][105]

Regional identity

Often one's local (geographic) identity could outweigh one's identity as a Rhōmaios. The terms xénos (Greek: ξένος) and exōtikós (Greek: ἐξωτικός) denoted "people foreign to the local population," regardless of whether they were from abroad or from elsewhere within the Byzantine Empire.[92] "When a person was away from home he was a stranger and was often treated with suspicion. A monk from western Asia Minor who joined a monastery in Pontus was 'disparaged and mistreated by everyone as a stranger'. The corollary to regional solidarity was regional hostility."[106]

Revival of Hellenism

From an evolutionary standpoint, Byzantium was a multi-ethnic empire that emerged as a Christian empire, soon comprised the Hellenised empire of the East, and ended its thousand-year history, in 1453, as a Greek Orthodox state: an empire that became a nation, almost by the modern meaning of the word.[107] The presence of a distinctive and historically rich literary culture was also very important in the division between "Greek" East and "Latin" West and thus the formation of both.[108] It was a multi-ethnic empire where the Hellenic element was predominant, especially in the later period.[105]

Spoken language and state, the markers of identity that were to become a fundamental tenet of nineteenth-century nationalism throughout Europe became, by accident, a reality during a formative period of medieval Greek history.[109] After the Empire lost non-Greek speaking territories in the 7th and 8th centuries, "Greek" (Ἕλλην), when not used to signify "pagan", became synonymous with "Roman" (Ῥωμαῖος) and "Christian" (Χριστιανός) to mean a Christian Greek citizen of the Eastern Roman Empire.[8]

In the context of increasing Venetian and Genoese power in the eastern Mediterranean, association with Hellenism took deeper root among the Byzantine elite, on account of a desire to distinguish themselves from the Latin West and to lay legitimate claims to Greek-speaking lands.[110] From the 12th century onwards, Byzantine Roman writers started to disassociate themselves from the Empire's pre-Constantinian Latin past, regarding henceforth the transfer of the Roman capital to Constantinople by Constantine as their founding moment and reappraised the normative value of the pagan Hellenes, even though the latter were still viewed as a group distinct from the Byzantines.[111] The first time the term "Hellene" was used to mean "Byzantine" in official correspondence was in a letter to Emperor Manuel I Komnenus (1118–1180).[112] Beginning in the twelfth century and especially after 1204, certain Byzantine Greek intellectuals began to use the ancient Greek ethnonym Héllēn (Greek: Ἕλλην) in order to describe Byzantine civilisation.[113] After the fall of Constantinople to the Crusaders in 1204, a small circle of the elite of the Empire of Nicaea used the term Hellene as a term of self-identification.[114] For example, in a letter to Pope Gregory IX, the Nicaean emperor John III Doukas Vatatzes (r. 1221–1254) claimed to have received the gift of royalty from Constantine the Great, and put emphasis on his "Hellenic" descent, exalting the wisdom of the Greek people. He was presenting Hellenic culture as an integral part of the Byzantine polity in defiance of Latin claims. Emperor Theodore II Laskaris (r. 1254–1258), the only one during this period to systematically employ the term Hellene as a term of self-identification, tried to revive Hellenic tradition by fostering the study of philosophy, for in his opinion there was a danger that philosophy "might abandon the Greeks and seek refuge among the Latins".[115][116] For historians of the court of Nikaia, however, such as George Akropolites and George Pachymeres, Rhomaios remained the only significant term of self-identification, despite traces of influence of the policy of the Emperors of Nikaia in their writings.[117]

During the Palaiologan dynasty, after the Byzantines recaptured Constantinople, Rhomaioi became again dominant as a term for self-description and there are few traces of Hellene, such as in the writings of George Gemistos Plethon;[101] the neo-platonic philosopher boasted "We are Hellenes by race and culture," and proposed a reborn Byzantine Empire following a utopian Hellenic system of government centered in Mystras.[102] Under the influence of Plethon, John Argyropoulos, addressed Emperor John VIII Palaiologos (r. 1425–1448) as "Sun King of Hellas"[103] and urged the last Byzantine emperor, Constantine XI Palaiologos (r. 1449–1453), to proclaim himself "King of the Hellenes".[118] These largely rhetorical expressions of Hellenic identity were confined in a very small circle and had no impact on the people. They were however continued by Byzantine intellectuals who participated in the Italian Renaissance.[113]

Western perception

In the eyes of the West, after the coronation of Charlemagne, the Byzantines were not acknowledged as the inheritors of the Roman Empire. Byzantium was rather perceived to be a corrupted continuation of ancient Greece, and was often derided as the "Empire of the Greeks" or "Kingdom of Greece". Such denials of Byzantium's Roman heritage and ecumenical rights would instigate the first resentments between Greeks and "Latins" (for the Latin liturgical rite) or "Franks" (for Charlemegne's ethnicity), as they were called by the Greeks.[104][119][120]

Popular Western opinion is reflected in the Translatio militiae, whose anonymous Latin author states that the Greeks had lost their courage and their learning, and therefore did not join in the war against the infidels. In another passage, the ancient Greeks are praised for their military skill and their learning, by which means the author draws a contrast with contemporary Byzantine Greeks, who were generally viewed as a non-warlike and schismatic people.[104][119][120] While this reputation seems strange to modern eyes given the unceasing military operations of the Byzantines and their eight century struggle against Islam and Islamic states, it reflects the realpolitik sophistication of the Byzantines, who employed diplomacy and trade as well as armed force in foreign policy, and the high-level of their culture in contrast to the zeal of the Crusaders and the ignorance and superstition of the medieval West. As historian Steven Runciman has put it:[121]

"Ever since our rough crusading forefathers first saw Constantinople and met, to their contemptuous disgust, a society where everyone read and wrote, ate food with forks and preferred diplomacy to war, it has been fashionable to pass the Byzantines by with scorn and to use their name as synonymous with decadence".

A turning point in how both sides viewed each other is probably the massacre of Latins in Constantinople in 1182. The massacre followed the deposition of Maria of Antioch, a Norman-Frankish (therefore "Latin") princess who was ruling as regent to her infant son Emperor Alexios II Komnenos. Maria was deeply unpopular due to the heavy-handed favoritism that had been shown the Italian merchants during the regency and popular celebrations of her downfall by the citizenry of Constantinople quickly turned to rioting and massacre. The event and the horrific reports of survivors inflamed religious tensions in the West, leading to the retaliatory sacking of Thessalonica, the empire's second largest city, by William II of Sicily. An example of Western opinion at the time is the writings of William of Tyre, who described the "Greek nation" as "a brood of vipers, like a serpent in the bosom or a mouse in the wardrobe evilly requite their guests".[122]

Eastern perception

In the East, the Persians and Arabs continued to regard the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Greeks as "Romans" (Arabic: ar-Rūm) after the fall of the Western Roman Empire, for instance, the 30th surah of the Quran (Ar-Rum) refers to the defeat of the Byzantines ("Rum" or "Romans") under Heraclius by the Persians at the Battle of Antioch (613), and promises an eventual Byzantine ("Roman") victory.[123] This traditional designation of the Byzantines as [Eastern] Romans in the Muslim world continued through the Middle Ages, leading to names such as the Sultanate of Rum ("Sultanate over the Romans") in conquered Anatolia and personal names such as Rumi, the mystical Persian poet who lived in formerly Byzantine Konya in the 1200s.[124] Late medieval Arab geographers still saw the Byzantines as Rum (Romans) not as Greeks, for instance Ibn Battuta saw the, then collapsing, Rum as "pale continuators and successors of the ancient Greeks (Yunani) in matters of culture."[125]

The Muslim Ottomans also referred to their Byzantine Greek rivals as Rûm, "Romans", and that term is still in official use in Turkey for the Greek-speaking natives (Rumlar) of Istanbul cf. Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople (Turkish: Rum Ortodoks Patrikhanesi, "Roman Orthodox Patriarchate"[126]).[19] Many place-names in Anatolia derive from this Turkish word (Rûm, "Romans") for the Byzantines: Erzurum ("Arzan of the Romans"), Rumelia ("Land of the Romans"), and Rumiye-i Suğra ("Little Rome", the region of Amasya and Sivas).[127]

Post-Byzantine history

 
The Scuola dei Greci was the cultural and religious center of the Greek community in Venice.[128]
 
Distribution of dialects descended from Byzantine Greek in 1923. Demotic in yellow. Pontic in orange. Cappadocian in green, with green dots indicating individual Cappadocian Greek speaking villages in 1910.[129]

Forming the majority of the Byzantine Empire proper at the height of its power, the Byzantine Greeks gradually came under the dominance of foreign powers with the decline of the Empire during the Middle Ages. The majority of Byzantine Greeks lived in the Ionian islands, the southern Balkans, and Aegean islands, Crete and Asia Minor. Following the end of the Byzantine Empire in 1453, there were many migration waves of Byzantine Greek scholars and emigres to the west, which is considered by many scholars key to the revival of Greek studies that led to the development of the Renaissance humanism and science. These emigres brought to Western Europe the relatively well-preserved remnants and accumulated knowledge of their own (Greek) civilization, which had mostly not survived the Early Middle Ages in the West. By 1500, the Greek community of Venice numbered about 5,000 members. The community was very active in Venice with the notable members such as Anna Notaras (the daughter of Loukas Notaras, the last megas doux of the Byzantine Empire), Thomas Flanginis (the founder of the Flanginian School) and many others. Additionally, the community founded the confraternity Scuola dei Greci in 1493. The Venetians also ruled Crete, the Ionian Islands and scattered islands and port cities of the former empire, the populations of which were augmented by refugees from other Byzantine provinces who preferred Venetian to Ottoman governance. Crete was especially notable for the Cretan School of icon-painting, where El Greco came from and which after 1453 became the most important in the Greek world.[130]

Nearly all of these Byzantine Greeks fell under Turkish Muslim rule by the 16th century. A notable group were the Phanariots, they emerged as a class of wealthy Greek merchants (of mostly noble Byzantine descent) during the second half of the 16th century, and were influential in the administration of the Ottoman Empire's Balkan domains and the Danubian Principalities in the 18th century.[131] The Phanariots usually built their houses in the Phanar quarter to be near the court of the Patriarch.

Many retained their identities, eventually comprising the modern Greek and Cypriot states, as well as the Cappadocian Greek and Pontic Greek minorities of the new Turkish state. These latter groups, the legacy Byzantine groups of Anatolia, were forced to emigrate from Turkey to Greece in 1923 by the Population exchange between Greece and Turkey. Other Byzantine Greeks, particularly in Anatolia, converted to Islam and underwent Turkification over time.[132] Additionally, those who came under Arab Muslim rule, either fled their former lands or submitted to the new Muslim rulers, receiving the status of Dhimmi. Over the centuries these surviving Christian societies of former Byzantine Greeks in Arab realms evolved into Antiochian Greeks (Melkites) or merged into the societies of Arab Christians, existing to this day.

Many Greek Orthodox populations, particularly those outside the newly independent modern Greek state, continued to refer to themselves as Romioi (i.e. Romans, Byzantines) well into the 20th century. Peter Charanis, who was born on the island of Lemnos in 1908 and later became a professor of Byzantine history at Rutgers University, recounts that when the island was taken from the Ottomans by Greece in 1912, Greek soldiers were sent to each village and stationed themselves in the public squares. Some of the island children ran to see what Greek soldiers looked like. ‘'What are you looking at?’’ one of the soldiers asked. ‘'At Hellenes,’’ the children replied. ‘'Are you not Hellenes yourselves?’’ the soldier retorted. ‘'No, we are Romans,’’ the children replied.[133] The Roman identity also survives prominently in some Greek populations outside of Greece itself. For instance, Greeks in Ukraine, settled there as part of Catherine the Great's Greek Plan in the 18th century, maintain Roman identity, designating themselves as Rumaioi.[134]

See also

Ethnic, religious and political formations

References

Citations

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  109. ^ Beaton 1996, p. 9.
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  115. ^ Angold 2000, p. 528.
  116. ^ Kaplanis 2014, pp. 91–2.
  117. ^ Page 2008, p. 129.
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  122. ^ Holt, Andrew (January 2005). . Crusades-Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 29 September 2007. Retrieved 1 December 2009. It is said that more than four thousand Latins of various age, sex, and condition were delivered thus to barbarous nations for a price. In such fashion did the perfidious Greek nation, a brood of vipers, like a serpent in the bosom or a mouse in the wardrobe evilly requite their guests—those who had not deserved such treatment and were far from anticipating anything of the kind; those to whom they had given their daughters, nieces, and sisters as wives and who, by long living together, had become their friends.
  123. ^ Haleem 2005, "30. The Byzantines (Al-Rum)", pp. 257–260.
  124. ^ Lewis 2000, p. 9: "The Anatolian peninsula which had belonged to the Byzantine, or eastern Roman empire, had only relatively recently been conquered by Muslims and even when it came to be controlled by Turkish Muslim rulers, it was still known to Arabs, Persians and Turks as the geographical area of Rum. As such, there are a number of historical personages born in or associated with Anatolia known as Rumi, literally "from Rome."
  125. ^ Vryonis 1999, p. 29.
  126. ^ In Turkey it is also referred to unofficially as Fener Rum Patrikhanesi, "Roman Patriarchate of the Phanar".
  127. ^ Har-El 1995, p. 195.
  128. ^ Geanakoplos D. (1966) Two Worlds of Christendom in Middle Ages and Renaissance, in Byzantine East & West. The Academy LiLibrary Harper & Row Publishers, New York.
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Further reading

  • Ahrweiler, Hélène (1975). L'idéologie politique de l'Empire byzantin. Paris: Presses Universitaires de France.
  • Charanis, Peter (1959). "Ethnic Changes in the Byzantine Empire in the Seventh Century". Dumbarton Oaks Papers. 13: 23–44. doi:10.2307/1291127. JSTOR 1291127.
  • Harris, Jonathan (2007). Constantinople: Capital of Byzantium (Hambledon Continuum). London: Hambledon & London. ISBN 978-1-84725-179-4.
  • Kazhdan, Alexander Petrovich, ed. (1991). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. New York and Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-504652-6.
  • Runciman, Steven (1966). Byzantine Civilisation. London: Edward Arnold Publishers Limited. ISBN 978-1-56619-574-4.
  • Toynbee, Arnold J. (1973). Constantine Porphyrogenitus and His World. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-215253-4.

byzantine, greeks, this, article, about, medieval, ethnic, group, byzantine, people, generally, population, byzantine, empire, were, greek, speaking, eastern, romans, orthodox, christianity, throughout, late, antiquity, middle, ages, they, were, main, inhabita. This article is about the medieval ethnic group For Byzantine people generally see Population of the Byzantine Empire The Byzantine Greeks were the Greek speaking Eastern Romans of Orthodox Christianity throughout Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages 1 They were the main inhabitants of the lands of the Byzantine Empire Eastern Roman Empire of Constantinople and Asia Minor modern Turkey the Greek islands Cyprus and portions of the southern Balkans and formed large minorities or pluralities in the coastal urban centres of the Levant and northern Egypt Throughout their history the Byzantine Greeks self identified as Romans Greek Ῥwmaῖoi romanized Rhōmaioi but are referred to as Byzantine Greeks in modern historiography Latin speakers identified them simply as Greeks or with the term Romei Byzantine GreeksῬwmaῖoiScenes of agricultural life in a Byzantine Gospel of the 11th century Regions with significant populationsByzantine Empire esp Asia Minor Balkans LanguagesMedieval GreekReligionEastern Orthodox ChristianityRelated ethnic groupsOttoman Greeks GreeksThe social structure of the Byzantine Greeks was primarily supported by a rural agrarian base that consisted of the peasantry and a small fraction of the poor These peasants lived within three kinds of settlements the chorion or village the agridion or hamlet and the proasteion or estate Many civil disturbances that occurred during the time of the Byzantine Empire were attributed to political factions within the Empire rather than to this large popular base Soldiers among the Byzantine Greeks were at first conscripted amongst the rural peasants and trained on an annual basis As the Byzantine Empire entered the 11th century more of the soldiers within the army were either professional men at arms or mercenaries Until the thirteenth century education within the Byzantine Greek population was more advanced than in the West particularly at primary school level resulting in comparatively high literacy rates Success came easily to Byzantine Greek merchants who enjoyed a very strong position in international trade Despite the challenges posed by rival Italian merchants they held their own throughout the latter half of the Byzantine Empire s existence The clergy also held a special place not only having more freedom than their Western counterparts but also maintaining a patriarch in Constantinople who was considered the equivalent of the pope This position of strength had built up over time for at the beginning of the Byzantine Empire under Emperor Constantine the Great r 306 337 only a small part about 10 of the population was Christian Use of the Greek language was already widespread in the eastern parts of the Roman empire when Constantine moved its capital to Constantinople although Latin was the language of the imperial administration From the reign of Emperor Heraclius r 610 641 Greek was the predominant language amongst the populace and also replaced Latin in administration At first the Byzantine Empire had a multi ethnic character but following the loss of the non Greek speaking provinces with the 7th century Muslim conquests it came to be dominated by the Byzantine Greeks who inhabited the heartland of the later empire modern Cyprus Greece Turkey and Sicily and portions of southern Bulgaria Crimea and Albania Over time the relationship between them and the West particularly with Latin Europe deteriorated Relations were further damaged by a schism between the Catholic West and Orthodox East that led to the Byzantine Greeks being labeled as heretics in the West Throughout the later centuries of the Byzantine Empire and particularly following the imperial coronation of the King of the Franks Charlemagne r 768 814 in Rome in 800 the Byzantines were not considered by Western Europeans as heirs of the Roman Empire but rather as part of an Eastern Greek kingdom As the Byzantine Empire declined the Roman identity survived until its fall in 1453 and beyond The Ottomans used the designation Rum Roman distinctly for the Ottoman Greeks and the term Rum millet Roman nation for all the Eastern Orthodox populations 2 It was kept by both Ottoman Greeks and their Ottoman overlords throughout the years of the Ottoman rule increasingly transforming into an ethnic identity marked by Greek language and adherence to Orthodox Christianity a precursor that shaped the modern Greek ethnic identity 3 4 The self identity as Roman among the Greeks only began to lose ground by the time of the Greek Revolution when multiple factors saw the name Hellene rise to replace it given the prior revival as self identification from the 13th century onward by the Nicaenean elite and in the intellectual circles by Georgios Gemistos Plethon and John Argyropoulos that sowed the seed for it 5 Today the modern Greek people still sometimes use in addition to the terms Greeks and Hellenes the Byzantine term Romaioi or Romioi Romans to refer to themselves as well as the term Romaic Roman to refer to their Modern Greek language 6 7 Contents 1 Terminology 2 Society 2 1 The poor 2 2 Peasantry 2 3 Soldiers 2 4 Teachers 2 5 Women 2 6 Entrepreneurs 2 7 Clergy 3 Culture 3 1 Language 3 2 Religion 4 Identity 4 1 Self perception 4 2 Official discourse 4 3 Regional identity 4 4 Revival of Hellenism 4 5 Western perception 4 6 Eastern perception 5 Post Byzantine history 6 See also 6 1 Ethnic religious and political formations 7 References 7 1 Citations 7 2 Sources 8 Further readingTerminologySee also Names of the Greeks The double headed eagle emblem of the Palaiologos dynasty During most of the Middle Ages the Byzantine Greeks self identified as Rhōmaioi Ῥwmaῖoi Romans meaning citizens of the Roman Empire a term which in the Greek language had become synonymous with Christian Greeks 8 9 The Latinizing term Graikoi Graikoi Greeks was also used 10 though its use was less common and nonexistent in official Byzantine political correspondence prior to the Fourth Crusade of 1204 11 While this Latin term for the ancient Hellenes could be used neutrally its use by Westerners from the 9th century onwards in order to challenge Byzantine claims to ancient Roman heritage rendered it a derogatory exonym for the Byzantines who barely used it mostly in contexts relating to the West such as texts relating to the Council of Florence to present the Western viewpoint 12 13 The ancient name Hellenes was synonymous to pagan in popular use but was revived as an ethnonym in the Middle Byzantine period 11th century 14 While in the West the term Roman acquired a new meaning in connection with the Catholic Church and the Bishop of Rome the Greek form Romaioi remained attached to the Greeks of the Eastern Roman Empire 15 The term Byzantine Greeks is an exonym applied by later historians like Hieronymus Wolf Byzantine citizens continued to call themselves Romaioi Romans in their language 16 Despite the shift in terminology in the West the Byzantines Empire s eastern neighbors such as the Arabs continued to refer to the Byzantines as Romans as for instance in the 30th Surah of the Quran Ar Rum 17 The signifier Roman Rum millet Roman nation was also used by the Byzantines later Ottoman rivals and its Turkish equivalent Rum Roman continues to be used officially by the government of Turkey to denote the Greek Orthodox natives Rumlar of Istanbul as well as the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople Turkish Rum Ortodoks Patrikhanesi Roman Orthodox Patriarchate 18 19 Among Slavic populations of southeast Europe such as Bulgarians and Serbs the name Rhomaioi Romans in their languages was most commonly translated as Greki Greeks Some Slavonic texts during the early medieval era also used the terms Rimljani or Romei 20 In medieval Bulgarian sources the Byzantine Emperors were the Tsars of the Greeks and the Byzantine Empire was known as Tsardom of the Greeks Both rulers of the Despotate of Epirus and the Empire of Nicaea were also Greek tsars ruling over Greek people 21 Equally among the Nordic people such as the Icelanders Varangians Vikings and other Scandinavian people the Rhomaioi Romans were called Grikkr Greeks There are various runic inscriptions left in Norway Sweden and even in Athens by travellers and members of the Varangian Guard like the Greece runestones and the Piraeus Lion which we meet the terms Grikkland Greece and Grikkr referring to their ventures in Byzantine Empire and their interaction with the Byzantines 22 SocietyWhile social mobility was not unknown in Byzantium the order of society was thought of as more enduring with the average man regarding the court of Heaven to be the archetype of the imperial court in Constantinople 23 This society included various classes of people that were neither exclusive nor immutable The most characteristic were the poor the peasants the soldiers the teachers entrepreneurs and clergy 23 The poor According to a text dated to AD 533 a man was termed poor if he did not have 50 gold coins aurei which was a modest though not negligible sum 24 The Byzantines were heirs to the Greek concepts of charity for the sake of the polis nevertheless it was the Christian concepts attested in the Bible that animated their giving habits 25 and specifically the examples of Basil of Caesarea who is the Greek equivalent of Santa Claus Gregory of Nyssa and John Chrysostom 25 The number of the poor fluctuated in the many centuries of Byzantium s existence but they provided a constant supply of muscle power for the building projects and rural work Their numbers apparently increased in the late fourth and early fifth centuries as barbarian raids and a desire to avoid taxation pushed rural populations into cities 26 Since Homeric times there were several categories of poverty the ptochos ptwxos passive poor was lower than the penes penhs active poor 27 They formed the majority of the infamous Constantinopolitan mob whose function was similar to the mob of the First Rome However while there are instances of riots attributed to the poor the majority of civil disturbances were specifically attributable to the various factions of the Hippodrome like the Greens and Blues 28 The poor made up a non negligible percentage of the population but they influenced the Christian society of Byzantium to create a large network of hospitals iatreia iatreia and almshouses and a religious and social model largely justified by the existence of the poor and born out of the Christian transformation of classical society 29 Peasantry Byzantine state and society relied on the Hellenistic system of joint tax liability due to the easy handling fast and simple revenue for the state from the different towns and villages chorio komai mostly made up of peasants who were the main income 30 There are no reliable figures as to the numbers of the peasantry yet it is widely assumed that the vast majority of Byzantine Greeks lived in rural and agrarian areas 31 In the Taktika of Emperor Leo VI the Wise r 886 912 the two professions defined as the backbone of the state are the peasantry geōrgike gewrgikh farmers and the soldiers stratiōtike stratiwtikh 31 Peasants lived mostly in villages whose name changed slowly from the classical kome kwmh to the modern chorio xwrio 32 While agriculture and herding were the dominant occupations of villagers they were not the only ones 32 There are records for the small town of Lampsakos situated on the eastern shore of the Hellespont which out of 173 households classifies 113 as peasant and 60 as urban which indicate other kinds of ancillary activities 32 The Treatise on Taxation preserved in the Biblioteca Marciana in Venice distinguishes between three types of rural settlements the chorion Greek xwrion or village the agridion Greek agridion or hamlet and the proasteion Greek proasteion or estate 32 According to a 14th century survey of the village of Aphetos donated to the monastery of Chilandar the average size of a landholding is only 3 5 modioi 0 08 ha 33 Taxes placed on rural populations included the kapnikon Greek kapnikon or hearth tax the synone Greek synonh or cash payment frequently affiliated with the kapnikon the ennomion Greek ennomion or pasture tax and the aerikon Greek aerikon meaning of the air which depended on the village s population and ranged between 4 and 20 gold coins annually 34 Their diet consisted of mainly grains and beans and in fishing communities fish was usually substituted for meat 35 Bread wine and olives were important staples of Byzantine diet with soldiers on campaign eating double baked and dried bread called paximadion Greek pa3imadion 36 As in antiquity and modern times the most common cultivations in the choraphia Greek xwrafia were olive groves and vineyards While Liutprand of Cremona a visitor from Italy found Greek wine irritating as it was often flavoured with resin retsina most other Westerners admired Greek wines Cretan in particular being famous 37 While both hunting and fishing were common the peasants mostly hunted to protect their herds and crops 38 Apiculture the keeping of bees was as highly developed in Byzantium as it had been in Ancient Greece 39 Aside from agriculture the peasants also laboured in the crafts fiscal inventories mentioning smiths Greek xalkeys chalkeus tailors Greek rapths rhaptes and cobblers Greek tzaggarios tzangarios 39 Soldiers See also Byzantine army Joshua portrayed as a soldier wearing the lamellar klivanion cuirass and a straight spathion sword Hosios Loukas During the Byzantine millennium hardly a year passed without a military campaign Soldiers were a normal part of everyday life much more so than in modern Western societies 40 While it is difficult to draw a distinction between Roman and Byzantine soldiers from an organizational aspect it is easier to do so in terms of their social profile 40 The military handbooks known as the Taktika continued a Hellenistic and Roman tradition and contain a wealth of information about the appearance customs habits and life of the soldiers 41 As with the peasantry many soldiers performed ancillary activities like medics and technicians 42 Selection for military duty was annual with yearly call ups and great stock was placed on military exercises during the winter months which formed a large part of a soldier s life 43 Until the 11th century the majority of the conscripts were from rural areas while the conscription of craftsmen and merchants is still an open question 44 From then on professional recruiting replaced conscription and the increasing use of mercenaries in the army was ruinous for the treasury 44 From the 10th century onwards there were laws connecting land ownership and military service While the state never allotted land for obligatory service soldiers could and did use their pay to buy landed estates and taxes would be decreased or waived in some cases 45 What the state did allocate to soldiers however from the 12th century onwards were the tax revenues from some estates called pronoiai pronoiai As in antiquity the basic food of the soldier remained the dried biscuit bread though its name had changed from boukelaton boykelaton to paximadion Teachers A page of 5th or 6th century Iliad like the one a grammarian might possess Byzantine education was the product of an ancient Greek educational tradition that stretched back to the 5th century BC 46 It comprised a tripartite system of education that taking shape during the Hellenistic era was maintained with inevitable changes up until the fall of Constantinople 46 The stages of education were the elementary school where pupils ranged from six to ten years secondary school where pupils ranged from ten to sixteen and higher education 47 Elementary education was widely available throughout most of the Byzantine Empire s existence in towns and occasionally in the countryside 47 This in turn ensured that literacy was much more widespread than in Western Europe at least until the twelfth century 47 48 Secondary education was confined to the larger cities while higher education was the exclusive provenance of Constantinople 47 Though not a society of mass literacy like modern societies Byzantine society was a profoundly literate one 49 Based on information from an extensive array of Byzantine documents from different periods i e homilies Ecloga etc Robert Browning concluded that while books were luxury items and functional literacy reading and writing was widespread but largely confined to cities and monasteries access to elementary education was provided in most cities for much of the time and sometimes in villages 50 Nikolaos Oikonomides focusing on 13th century Byzantine literacy in Western Asia Minor states that Byzantine society had a completely literate church an almost completely literate aristocracy some literate horsemen rare literate peasants and almost completely illiterate women 51 Ioannis Stouraitis estimates that the percentage of the Empire s population with some degree of literacy was at most 15 20 based primarily on the mention of illiterate Byzantine tourmarchai in the Tactica of Emperor Leo VI the Wise r 886 912 52 In Byzantium the elementary school teacher occupied a low social position and taught mainly from simple fairy tale books Aesop s Fables were often used 53 However the grammarian and rhetorician teachers responsible for the following two phases of education were more respected 53 These used classical Greek texts like Homer s Iliad or Odyssey and much of their time was taken with detailed word for word explication 53 Books were rare and very expensive and likely only possessed by teachers who dictated passages to students 54 Women Scenes of marriage and family life in Constantinople Women have tended to be overlooked in Byzantine studies as Byzantine society left few records about them 55 Women were disadvantaged in some aspects of their legal status and in their access to education and limited in their freedom of movement 56 The life of a Byzantine Greek woman could be divided into three phases girlhood motherhood and widowhood 57 Childhood was brief and perilous even more so for girls than boys 57 Parents would celebrate the birth of a boy twice as much and there is some evidence of female infanticide i e roadside abandonment and suffocation though it was contrary to both civil and canon law 57 Educational opportunities for girls were few they did not attend regular schools but were taught in groups at home by tutors 58 With few exceptions education was limited to literacy and the Bible a famous exception is the princess Anna Komnene 1083 1153 whose Alexiad displays a great depth of erudition and the renowned 9th century Byzantine poet and composer Kassiani 59 The majority of a young girl s daily life would be spent in household and agrarian chores preparing herself for marriage 59 For most girls childhood came to an end with the onset of puberty which was followed shortly after by betrothal and marriage 60 Although marriage arranged by the family was the norm romantic love was not unknown 60 Most women bore many children but few survived infancy and grief for the loss of a loved one was an inalienable part of life 61 The main form of birth control was abstinence and while there is evidence of contraception it seems to have been mainly used by prostitutes 62 Due to prevailing norms of modesty women would wear clothing that covered the whole of their body except their hands 63 While women among the poor sometimes wore sleeveless tunics most women were obliged to cover even their hair with the long maphorion maforion veil Women of means however spared no expense in adorning their clothes with exquisite jewelry and fine silk fabrics 63 Divorces were hard to obtain even though there were laws permitting them 64 Husbands would often beat their wives though the reverse was not unknown as in Theodore Prodromos s description of a battered husband in the Ptochoprodromos poems 64 Although female life expectancy in Byzantium was lower than that of men due to death in childbirth wars and the fact that men married younger female widowhood was still fairly common 64 Still some women were able to circumvent societal strictures and work as traders artisans abbots entertainers and scholars 65 Entrepreneurs See also Byzantine economy Gold solidus of Justinian II 4 42 grams 0 156 oz struck after 692 66 The traditional image of Byzantine Greek merchants as unenterprising benefactors of state aid is beginning to change for that of mobile pro active agents 67 The merchant class particularly that of Constantinople became a force of its own that could at times even threaten the Emperor as it did in the eleventh and twelfth centuries 68 This was achieved through efficient use of credit and other monetary innovations Merchants invested surplus funds in financial products called chreokoinonia xreokoinwnia the equivalent and perhaps ancestor of the later Italian commenda 68 Eventually the purchasing power of Byzantine merchants became such that it could influence prices in markets as far afield as Cairo and Alexandria 67 In reflection of their success emperors gave merchants the right to become members of the Senate that is to integrate themselves with the ruling elite 69 This had an end by the end of the eleventh century when political machinations allowed the landed aristocracy to secure the throne for a century and more 69 Following that phase however the enterprising merchants bounced back and wielded real clout during the time of the Third Crusade 70 The reason Byzantine Greek merchants have often been neglected in historiography is not that they were any less able than their ancient or modern Greek colleagues in matters of trade It rather originated with the way history was written in Byzantium which was often under the patronage of their competitors the court and land aristocracy 70 The fact that they were eventually surpassed by their Italian rivals is attributable to the privileges sought and acquired by the Crusader States within the Levant and the dominant maritime violence of the Italians 70 Clergy Unlike in Western Europe where priests were clearly demarcated from the laymen the clergy of the Eastern Roman Empire remained in close contact with the rest of society 71 Readers and subdeacons were drawn from the laity and expected to be at least twenty years of age while priests and bishops had to be at least 30 71 Unlike the Latin church the Byzantine church allowed married priests and deacons as long as they were married before ordination Bishops however were required to be unmarried 71 While the religious hierarchy mirrored the Empire s administrative divisions the clergy were more ubiquitous than the emperor s servants 72 The issue of caesaropapism while usually associated with the Byzantine Empire is now understood to be an oversimplification of actual conditions in the Empire 73 By the fifth century the Patriarch of Constantinople was recognized as first among equals of the four eastern Patriarchs and as of equal status with the Pope in Rome 71 The ecclesiastical provinces were called eparchies and were headed by archbishops or metropolitans who supervised their subordinate bishops or episkopoi For most people however it was their parish priest or papas from the Greek word for father that was the most recognizable face of the clergy 71 74 CultureLanguage Main article Medieval Greek Uncial script from a 4th century Septuagint manuscript The Eastern Roman Empire was in language and civilization a Greek society 75 Linguistically Byzantine or medieval Greek is situated between the Hellenistic Koine and modern phases of the language 76 Since as early as the Hellenistic era Greek had been the lingua franca of the educated elites of the Eastern Mediterranean spoken natively in the southern Balkans the Greek islands Asia Minor and the ancient and Hellenistic Greek colonies of Southern Italy the Black Sea Western Asia and North Africa 77 At the beginning of the Byzantine millennium the koine Greek koinh remained the basis for spoken Greek and Christian writings while Attic Greek was the language of the philosophers and orators 78 As Christianity became the dominant religion Attic began to be used in Christian writings in addition to and often interspersed with koine Greek 78 Nonetheless from the 6th at least until the 12th century Attic remained entrenched in the educational system while further changes to the spoken language can be postulated for the early and middle Byzantine periods 78 The population of the Byzantine Empire at least in its early stages had a variety of mother tongues including Greek 78 These included Latin Aramaic Coptic and Caucasian languages while Cyril Mango also cites evidence for bilingualism in the south and southeast 79 These influences as well as an influx of people of Arabic Celtic Germanic Turkic and Slavic backgrounds supplied medieval Greek with many loanwords that have survived in the modern Greek language 79 From the 11th century onward there was also a steady rise in the literary use of the vernacular 79 Following the Fourth Crusade there was increased contact with the West and the lingua franca of commerce became Italian In the areas of the Crusader kingdoms a classical education Greek paideia paideia ceased to be a sine qua non of social status leading to the rise of the vernacular 79 From this era many beautiful works in the vernacular often written by people deeply steeped in classical education are attested 79 A famous example is the four Ptochoprodromic poems attributed to Theodoros Prodromos 79 From the 13th to the 15th centuries the last centuries of the Empire there arose several works including laments fables romances and chronicles written outside Constantinople which until then had been the seat of most literature in an idiom termed by scholars as Byzantine Koine 79 However the diglossia of the Greek speaking world which had already started in ancient Greece continued under Ottoman rule and persisted in the modern Greek state until 1976 although Koine Greek remains the official language of the Greek Orthodox Church As shown in the poems of Ptochoprodromos an early stage of modern Greek had already been shaped by the 12th century and possibly earlier Vernacular Greek continued to be known as Romaic Roman until the 20th century 80 Religion See also Eastern Orthodox Church King David in the imperial purple Paris Psalter At the time of Constantine the Great r 306 337 barely 10 of the Roman Empire s population were Christians with most of them being urban population and generally found in the eastern part of the Roman Empire The majority of people still honoured the old gods in the public Roman way of religio 81 As Christianity became a complete philosophical system whose theory and apologetics were heavily indebted to the Classic word this changed 82 In addition Constantine as Pontifex Maximus was responsible for the correct cultus or veneratio of the deity which was in accordance with former Roman practice 83 The move from the old religion to the new entailed some elements of continuity as well as break with the past though the artistic heritage of paganism was literally broken by Christian zeal 84 Christianity led to the development of a few phenomena characteristic of Byzantium Namely the intimate connection between Church and State a legacy of Roman cultus 84 Also the creation of a Christian philosophy that guided Byzantine Greeks in their everyday lives 84 And finally the dichotomy between the Christian ideals of the Bible and classical Greek paideia which could not be left out however since so much of Christian scholarship and philosophy depended on it 82 84 These shaped Byzantine Greek character and the perceptions of themselves and others Christians at the time of Constantine s conversion made up only 10 of the population 81 This would rise to 50 by the end of the fourth century and 90 by the end of the fifth century 84 Emperor Justinian I r 527 565 then brutally mopped up the rest of the pagans highly literate academics on one end of the scale and illiterate peasants on the other 84 A conversion so rapid seems to have been rather the result of expediency than of conviction 84 The survival of the Empire in the East assured an active role of the emperor in the affairs of the Church The Byzantine state inherited from pagan times the administrative and financial routine of organising religious affairs and this routine was applied to the Christian Church Following the pattern set by Eusebius of Caesarea the Byzantines viewed the emperor as a representative or messenger of Christ responsible particularly for the propagation of Christianity among pagans and for the externals of the religion such as administration and finances The imperial role in the affairs of the Church never developed into a fixed legally defined system however 85 With the decline of Rome and internal dissension in the other Eastern patriarchates the church of Constantinople became between the 6th and 11th centuries the richest and most influential centre of Christendom 86 Even when the Byzantine Empire was reduced to only a shadow of its former self the Church as an institution exercised so much influence both inside and outside the imperial frontiers as never before As George Ostrogorsky points out 87 The Patriarchate of Constantinople remained the center of the Orthodox world with subordinate metropolitan sees and archbishoprics in the territory of Asia Minor and the Balkans now lost to Byzantium as well as in Caucasus Russia and Lithuania The Church remained the most stable element in the Byzantine Empire In terms of religion Byzantine Greek Macedonia is also significant as being the home of Saints Cyril and Methodius two Greek brothers from Thessaloniki Salonika who were sent on state sponsored missions to proselytize among the Slavs of the Balkans and east central Europe This involved Cyril and Methodius having to translate the Christian Bible into the Slavs own language for which they invented an alphabet that became known as Old Church Slavonic In the process this cemented the Greek brothers status as the pioneers of Slavic literature and those who first introduced Byzantine civilization and Orthodox Christianity to the hitherto illiterate and pagan Slavs IdentitySelf perception 11th century Hagia Sophia mosaic On the left Constantine IX faithful in Christ the God Emperor of the Romans In modern Byzantine scholarship there are currently three main schools of thought on medieval eastern Roman identity First a school of thought that developed largely under the influence of modern Greek nationalism treats Roman identity as the medieval form of a perennial Greek national identity In this view as heirs to the ancient Greeks and of the Roman state the Byzantines thought of themselves as Rhomaioi or Romans though they knew that they were ethnically Greeks 88 Second which could be regarded as preponderant in the field considers Romanity the mode of self identification of the subjects of a multi ethnic empire at least up to the 12th century where the average subject identified as Roman Third a line of thought argues that the eastern Roman identity was a separate pre modern national identity 89 The established consensus in the field of Byzantine studies does not call into question the self identification of the Byzantines as Romans 90 The defining traits of being considered one of the Rhomaioi were being an Eastern Orthodox Christian and more importantly speaking Greek characteristics which had to be acquired by birth if one was not to be considered an allogenes or even a barbarian 91 The term mostly used to describe someone who was a foreigner to both the Byzantines and their state was ethnikos Greek ἐ8nikos a term which originally described non Jews or non Christians but had lost its religious meaning 92 In a classicizing vein usually applied to other peoples Byzantine authors regularly referred to their people as Ausones an ancient name for the original inhabitants of Italy 93 Most historians agree that the defining features of their civilization were 1 Greek language culture literature and science 2 Roman law and tradition 3 Christian faith 94 The Byzantine Greeks were and perceived themselves as heirs to the culture of ancient Greece 95 the political heirs of imperial Rome 96 97 and followers of the Apostles 98 Thus their sense of Romanity was different from that of their contemporaries in the West Romaic was the name of the vulgar Greek language as opposed to Hellenic which was its literary or doctrinal form 99 Being a Roman was mostly a matter of culture and religion rather than speaking Greek or living within Byzantine territory and had nothing to do with race 100 Some Byzantines began to use the name Greek Hellen with its ancient meaning of someone living in the territory of Greece rather than its usually Christian meaning of pagan 100 Realizing that the restored empire held lands of ancient Greeks and had a population largely descended from them some scholars such as George Gemistos Plethon and John Argyropoulos 101 102 103 put emphasized pagan Greek and Christian Roman past mostly during a time of Byzantine political decline 100 However such views were part of a few learned people and the majority of Byzantine Christians would see them as nonsensical or dangerous 100 After 1204 the Byzantine successor entities were mostly Greek speaking but not nation states like France and England of that time 100 The risk or reality of foreign rule not some sort of Greek national consciousness was the primary element that drew contemporary Byzantines together 100 Byzantine elites and common people nurtured a high self esteem based on their perceived cultural superiority towards foreigners whom they viewed with contempt despite the frequent occurrence of compliments to an individual foreigner as an andreios Rhōmaiophrōn ἀndreῖos Ῥwmaiofrwn roughly a brave Roman minded fellow 92 There was always an element of indifference or neglect of everything non Greek which was therefore barbarian 104 Official discourse In official discourse all inhabitants of the empire were subjects of the emperor and therefore Romans Thus the primary definition of Rhōmaios was political or statist 105 In order to succeed in being a full blown and unquestioned Roman it was best to be a Greek Orthodox Christian and a Greek speaker at least in one s public persona 105 Yet the cultural uniformity which the Byzantine church and the state pursued through Orthodoxy and the Greek language was not sufficient to erase distinct identities nor did it aim to 104 105 Regional identity Often one s local geographic identity could outweigh one s identity as a Rhōmaios The terms xenos Greek 3enos and exōtikos Greek ἐ3wtikos denoted people foreign to the local population regardless of whether they were from abroad or from elsewhere within the Byzantine Empire 92 When a person was away from home he was a stranger and was often treated with suspicion A monk from western Asia Minor who joined a monastery in Pontus was disparaged and mistreated by everyone as a stranger The corollary to regional solidarity was regional hostility 106 Revival of Hellenism From an evolutionary standpoint Byzantium was a multi ethnic empire that emerged as a Christian empire soon comprised the Hellenised empire of the East and ended its thousand year history in 1453 as a Greek Orthodox state an empire that became a nation almost by the modern meaning of the word 107 The presence of a distinctive and historically rich literary culture was also very important in the division between Greek East and Latin West and thus the formation of both 108 It was a multi ethnic empire where the Hellenic element was predominant especially in the later period 105 Spoken language and state the markers of identity that were to become a fundamental tenet of nineteenth century nationalism throughout Europe became by accident a reality during a formative period of medieval Greek history 109 After the Empire lost non Greek speaking territories in the 7th and 8th centuries Greek Ἕllhn when not used to signify pagan became synonymous with Roman Ῥwmaῖos and Christian Xristianos to mean a Christian Greek citizen of the Eastern Roman Empire 8 In the context of increasing Venetian and Genoese power in the eastern Mediterranean association with Hellenism took deeper root among the Byzantine elite on account of a desire to distinguish themselves from the Latin West and to lay legitimate claims to Greek speaking lands 110 From the 12th century onwards Byzantine Roman writers started to disassociate themselves from the Empire s pre Constantinian Latin past regarding henceforth the transfer of the Roman capital to Constantinople by Constantine as their founding moment and reappraised the normative value of the pagan Hellenes even though the latter were still viewed as a group distinct from the Byzantines 111 The first time the term Hellene was used to mean Byzantine in official correspondence was in a letter to Emperor Manuel I Komnenus 1118 1180 112 Beginning in the twelfth century and especially after 1204 certain Byzantine Greek intellectuals began to use the ancient Greek ethnonym Hellen Greek Ἕllhn in order to describe Byzantine civilisation 113 After the fall of Constantinople to the Crusaders in 1204 a small circle of the elite of the Empire of Nicaea used the term Hellene as a term of self identification 114 For example in a letter to Pope Gregory IX the Nicaean emperor John III Doukas Vatatzes r 1221 1254 claimed to have received the gift of royalty from Constantine the Great and put emphasis on his Hellenic descent exalting the wisdom of the Greek people He was presenting Hellenic culture as an integral part of the Byzantine polity in defiance of Latin claims Emperor Theodore II Laskaris r 1254 1258 the only one during this period to systematically employ the term Hellene as a term of self identification tried to revive Hellenic tradition by fostering the study of philosophy for in his opinion there was a danger that philosophy might abandon the Greeks and seek refuge among the Latins 115 116 For historians of the court of Nikaia however such as George Akropolites and George Pachymeres Rhomaios remained the only significant term of self identification despite traces of influence of the policy of the Emperors of Nikaia in their writings 117 During the Palaiologan dynasty after the Byzantines recaptured Constantinople Rhomaioi became again dominant as a term for self description and there are few traces of Hellene such as in the writings of George Gemistos Plethon 101 the neo platonic philosopher boasted We are Hellenes by race and culture and proposed a reborn Byzantine Empire following a utopian Hellenic system of government centered in Mystras 102 Under the influence of Plethon John Argyropoulos addressed Emperor John VIII Palaiologos r 1425 1448 as Sun King of Hellas 103 and urged the last Byzantine emperor Constantine XI Palaiologos r 1449 1453 to proclaim himself King of the Hellenes 118 These largely rhetorical expressions of Hellenic identity were confined in a very small circle and had no impact on the people They were however continued by Byzantine intellectuals who participated in the Italian Renaissance 113 Western perception Further information Liutprand of Cremona and Massacre of the Latins The Entry of the Crusaders into Constantinople by Eugene Delacroix 1840 In the eyes of the West after the coronation of Charlemagne the Byzantines were not acknowledged as the inheritors of the Roman Empire Byzantium was rather perceived to be a corrupted continuation of ancient Greece and was often derided as the Empire of the Greeks or Kingdom of Greece Such denials of Byzantium s Roman heritage and ecumenical rights would instigate the first resentments between Greeks and Latins for the Latin liturgical rite or Franks for Charlemegne s ethnicity as they were called by the Greeks 104 119 120 Popular Western opinion is reflected in the Translatio militiae whose anonymous Latin author states that the Greeks had lost their courage and their learning and therefore did not join in the war against the infidels In another passage the ancient Greeks are praised for their military skill and their learning by which means the author draws a contrast with contemporary Byzantine Greeks who were generally viewed as a non warlike and schismatic people 104 119 120 While this reputation seems strange to modern eyes given the unceasing military operations of the Byzantines and their eight century struggle against Islam and Islamic states it reflects the realpolitik sophistication of the Byzantines who employed diplomacy and trade as well as armed force in foreign policy and the high level of their culture in contrast to the zeal of the Crusaders and the ignorance and superstition of the medieval West As historian Steven Runciman has put it 121 Ever since our rough crusading forefathers first saw Constantinople and met to their contemptuous disgust a society where everyone read and wrote ate food with forks and preferred diplomacy to war it has been fashionable to pass the Byzantines by with scorn and to use their name as synonymous with decadence dd A turning point in how both sides viewed each other is probably the massacre of Latins in Constantinople in 1182 The massacre followed the deposition of Maria of Antioch a Norman Frankish therefore Latin princess who was ruling as regent to her infant son Emperor Alexios II Komnenos Maria was deeply unpopular due to the heavy handed favoritism that had been shown the Italian merchants during the regency and popular celebrations of her downfall by the citizenry of Constantinople quickly turned to rioting and massacre The event and the horrific reports of survivors inflamed religious tensions in the West leading to the retaliatory sacking of Thessalonica the empire s second largest city by William II of Sicily An example of Western opinion at the time is the writings of William of Tyre who described the Greek nation as a brood of vipers like a serpent in the bosom or a mouse in the wardrobe evilly requite their guests 122 Eastern perception Further information Rum Millet In the East the Persians and Arabs continued to regard the Eastern Roman Byzantine Greeks as Romans Arabic ar Rum after the fall of the Western Roman Empire for instance the 30th surah of the Quran Ar Rum refers to the defeat of the Byzantines Rum or Romans under Heraclius by the Persians at the Battle of Antioch 613 and promises an eventual Byzantine Roman victory 123 This traditional designation of the Byzantines as Eastern Romans in the Muslim world continued through the Middle Ages leading to names such as the Sultanate of Rum Sultanate over the Romans in conquered Anatolia and personal names such as Rumi the mystical Persian poet who lived in formerly Byzantine Konya in the 1200s 124 Late medieval Arab geographers still saw the Byzantines as Rum Romans not as Greeks for instance Ibn Battuta saw the then collapsing Rum as pale continuators and successors of the ancient Greeks Yunani in matters of culture 125 The Muslim Ottomans also referred to their Byzantine Greek rivals as Rum Romans and that term is still in official use in Turkey for the Greek speaking natives Rumlar of Istanbul cf Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople Turkish Rum Ortodoks Patrikhanesi Roman Orthodox Patriarchate 126 19 Many place names in Anatolia derive from this Turkish word Rum Romans for the Byzantines Erzurum Arzan of the Romans Rumelia Land of the Romans and Rumiye i Sugra Little Rome the region of Amasya and Sivas 127 Post Byzantine historyFurther information Greek scholars in the Renaissance Ottoman Greeks and Phanariots The Scuola dei Greci was the cultural and religious center of the Greek community in Venice 128 Distribution of dialects descended from Byzantine Greek in 1923 Demotic in yellow Pontic in orange Cappadocian in green with green dots indicating individual Cappadocian Greek speaking villages in 1910 129 Forming the majority of the Byzantine Empire proper at the height of its power the Byzantine Greeks gradually came under the dominance of foreign powers with the decline of the Empire during the Middle Ages The majority of Byzantine Greeks lived in the Ionian islands the southern Balkans and Aegean islands Crete and Asia Minor Following the end of the Byzantine Empire in 1453 there were many migration waves of Byzantine Greek scholars and emigres to the west which is considered by many scholars key to the revival of Greek studies that led to the development of the Renaissance humanism and science These emigres brought to Western Europe the relatively well preserved remnants and accumulated knowledge of their own Greek civilization which had mostly not survived the Early Middle Ages in the West By 1500 the Greek community of Venice numbered about 5 000 members The community was very active in Venice with the notable members such as Anna Notaras the daughter of Loukas Notaras the last megas doux of the Byzantine Empire Thomas Flanginis the founder of the Flanginian School and many others Additionally the community founded the confraternity Scuola dei Greci in 1493 The Venetians also ruled Crete the Ionian Islands and scattered islands and port cities of the former empire the populations of which were augmented by refugees from other Byzantine provinces who preferred Venetian to Ottoman governance Crete was especially notable for the Cretan School of icon painting where El Greco came from and which after 1453 became the most important in the Greek world 130 Nearly all of these Byzantine Greeks fell under Turkish Muslim rule by the 16th century A notable group were the Phanariots they emerged as a class of wealthy Greek merchants of mostly noble Byzantine descent during the second half of the 16th century and were influential in the administration of the Ottoman Empire s Balkan domains and the Danubian Principalities in the 18th century 131 The Phanariots usually built their houses in the Phanar quarter to be near the court of the Patriarch Many retained their identities eventually comprising the modern Greek and Cypriot states as well as the Cappadocian Greek and Pontic Greek minorities of the new Turkish state These latter groups the legacy Byzantine groups of Anatolia were forced to emigrate from Turkey to Greece in 1923 by the Population exchange between Greece and Turkey Other Byzantine Greeks particularly in Anatolia converted to Islam and underwent Turkification over time 132 Additionally those who came under Arab Muslim rule either fled their former lands or submitted to the new Muslim rulers receiving the status of Dhimmi Over the centuries these surviving Christian societies of former Byzantine Greeks in Arab realms evolved into Antiochian Greeks Melkites or merged into the societies of Arab Christians existing to this day Many Greek Orthodox populations particularly those outside the newly independent modern Greek state continued to refer to themselves as Romioi i e Romans Byzantines well into the 20th century Peter Charanis who was born on the island of Lemnos in 1908 and later became a professor of Byzantine history at Rutgers University recounts that when the island was taken from the Ottomans by Greece in 1912 Greek soldiers were sent to each village and stationed themselves in the public squares Some of the island children ran to see what Greek soldiers looked like What are you looking at one of the soldiers asked At Hellenes the children replied Are you not Hellenes yourselves the soldier retorted No we are Romans the children replied 133 The Roman identity also survives prominently in some Greek populations outside of Greece itself For instance Greeks in Ukraine settled there as part of Catherine the Great s Greek Plan in the 18th century maintain Roman identity designating themselves as Rumaioi 134 See alsoAnatolia Byzantine studies Decline of the Roman Empire Greek scholars in the Renaissance Greek Turkish relations Hagia Sophia Hellenization History of Greece History of the Byzantine Empire Ethnic religious and political formations Byzantine Jewry Romaniote Jews Ottoman Greeks Greeks Roman peopleReferencesCitations Stouraitis 2014 pp 176 177 Stouraitis 2017 p 70 Kaldellis 2007 p 113 Asdrachas 2005 p 8 On the part of the Ottoman conquerors already from the early years of the conquest the word Rum meant at the same time their subjects of the Christian Orthodox faith and also those speaking Greek as distinct from the neighbouring Albanians or Vlachs Ricks David Magdalino Paul 5 December 2016 Byzantium and the Modern Greek Identity Routledge doi 10 4324 9781315260983 ISBN 978 1 315 26098 3 Kaldellis 2007 pp 42 43 Angold 1975 p 65 Merry 2004 p 376 Institute for Neohellenic Research 2005 p 8 Kakavas 2002 p 29 Kaplanis 2014 pp 88 97 a b Harrison 2002 p 268 Roman Greek if not used in its sense of pagan and Christian became synonymous terms counterposed to foreigner barbarian infidel The citizens of the Empire now predominantly of Greek ethnicity and language were often called simply o xristwnymos laos the people who bear Christ s name Earl 1968 p 148 Paul the Silentiary Descriptio S Sophiae et Ambonis 425 Line 12 xῶros ὅde Graikoῖsi Theodore the Studite Epistulae 419 Line 30 ἐn Graikoῖs Angelov 2007 p 96 including footnote 67 Makrides 2009 Chapter 2 Christian Monotheism Orthodox Christianity Greek Orthodoxy p 74 Magdalino 1991 Chapter XIV Hellenism and Nationalism in Byzantium p 10 Page 2008 pp 66 87 256 Kaplanis 2014 pp 86 7 Cameron 2009 p 7 Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 History of Europe The Romans Ostrogorsky 1969 p 2 Quran 30 2 5 In Turkey it is also referred to unofficially as Fener Rum Patrikhanesi Roman Patriarchate of the Phanar a b Doumanis 2014 p 210 Nikolov A Empire of the Romans or Tsardom of the Greeks The Image of Byzantium in the Earliest Slavonic Translations from Greek Byzantinoslavica 65 2007 31 39 Herrin Judith Saint Guillain Guillaume 2011 Identities and Allegiances in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204 Ashgate Publishing Ltd p 111 ISBN 9781409410980 Jakobsson Sverrir 2016 The Varangian Legend Testimony from the Old Norse sources pp 346 361 1 a b Cavallo 1997 p 2 Cavallo 1997 p 15 a b Cavallo 1997 p 16 Cavallo 1997 p 18 Cavallo 1997 pp 15 17 Cavallo 1997 pp 21 22 Cavallo 1997 pp 19 25 Historians and the Economy Zosimos and Prokopios on Fifth and Sixth Century Economie Development Byzantine Narrative BRILL pp 462 474 1 January 2017 doi 10 1163 9789004344877 036 ISBN 9789004344877 retrieved 13 March 2022 a b Cavallo 1997 p 43 a b c d Cavallo 1997 p 44 Cavallo 1997 p 45 Harvey 1989 pp 103 104 Cavallo 1997 pp 44 45 Cavallo 1997 p 47 Cavallo 1997 p 49 Cavallo 1997 p 51 Cavallo 1997 p 55 a b Cavallo 1997 p 56 a b Cavallo 1997 p 74 Cavallo 1997 p 75 Cavallo 1997 p 76 Cavallo 1997 p 77 a b Cavallo 1997 p 80 Cavallo 1997 p 81 a b Cavallo 1997 p 95 a b c d Education The Byzantine Empire Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2016 Retrieved 16 May 2016 Rautman 2006 p 282 Unlike the early medieval West where education took place mainly in monasteries rudimentary literacy was widespread in Byzantine society as a whole Browning 1993 pp 70 81 Browning 1989 VII Literacy in the Byzantine World pp 39 54 Browning 1993 pp 63 84 Oikonomides 1993 p 262 Stouraitis 2014 pp 196 197 a b c Cavallo 1997 p 96 Cavallo 1997 p 97 Cavallo 1997 p 117 Cavallo 1997 p 118 a b c Cavallo 1997 p 119 Cavallo 1997 pp 119 120 a b Cavallo 1997 p 120 a b Cavallo 1997 p 121 Cavallo 1997 p 124 Cavallo 1997 p 125 a b Cavallo 1997 p 127 a b c Cavallo 1997 p 128 Rautman 2006 p 26 Grierson 1999 p 8 a b Laiou amp Morrison 2007 p 139 a b Laiou amp Morrison 2007 p 140 a b Laiou amp Morrison 2007 p 141 a b c Laiou amp Morrison 2007 p 142 a b c d e Rautman 2006 p 23 Rautman 2006 p 24 Caesaropapism Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2016 Retrieved 16 May 2016 Harper Douglas 2001 2010 Pope Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 25 May 2011 Hamilton 2003 p 59 Alexiou 2001 p 22 Goldhill 2006 pp 272 273 a b c d Alexiou 2001 p 23 a b c d e f g Alexiou 2001 p 24 Adrados 2005 p 226 a b Mango 2002 p 96 a b Mango 2002 p 101 Mango 2002 p 105 a b c d e f g Mango 2002 p 111 Meyendorff 1982 p 13 Meyendorff 1982 p 19 Meyendorff 1982 p 130 For statements of this view see for example Niehoff 2012 Margalit Finkelberg Canonising and Decanonising Homer Reception of the Homeric Poems in Antiquity and Modernity p 20 or Pontificium Institutum Orientalium Studiorum 2003 p 482 As heirs to the Greeks and Romans of old the Byzantines thought of themselves as Rhomaioi or Romans though they knew full well that they were ethnically Greeks see also Savvides amp Hendricks 2001 Stouraitis 2014 pp 176 177 The main lines of thinking in the research on medieval Eastern Roman iden tity could be roughly summarized as follows The first extensively influenced by the retrospective Modern Greek national discourse approaches this identity as the medieval form of the perennial Greek national identity The second which could be regarded as preponderant within the field albeit by no means monolithically concordant in its various utterances speaks of a multi ethnic im perial state at least up to the twelfth century the average subject of which identified as Roman The third and more recent approach dismissed the supposition of a multi ethnic empire and suggested that Byzantium should be regarded as a pre modern Nation State in which Romanness had the traits of national identity Stouraitis 2017 p 70 Kaldellis 2007 p 113 the Byzantine were Romans who happened to speak Greek and not Greeks who happened to call themselves Romans Malatras 2011 pp 421 2 a b c Ahrweiler amp Laiou 1998 pp 2 3 Kaldellis 2007 p 66 Just as the Byzantines referred to foreign peoples by classical names making the Goths into Skythians and the Arabs into Medes so too did they regularly call themselves Ausones an ancient name for the original inhabitants of Italy This was the standard classicizing name that the Byzantines used for themselves not Hellenes Baynes amp Moss 1948 Introduction p xx Ostrogorsky 1969 p 27 Kaldellis 2007 pp 2 3 Kazhdan amp Constable 1982 p 12 Kazhdan amp Constable 1982 p 12 Runciman 1970 p 14 Kitzinger 1967 Introduction p x All through the Middle Ages the Byzantines considered themselves the guardians and heirs of the Hellenic tradition Kazhdan amp Constable 1982 p 12 Runciman 1970 p 14 Haldon 1999 p 7 Browning 1992 Introduction p xiii The Byzantines did not call themselves Byzantines but Romaioi Romans They were well aware of their role as heirs of the Roman Empire which for many centuries had united under a single government the whole Mediterranean world and much that was outside it Kazhdan amp Constable 1982 p 12 Runciman 1985 p 119 a b c d e f Treadgold Warren 1997 A History of the Byzantine State and Society Stanford California Stanford University Press pp 804 805 ISBN 0 8047 2630 2 a b Kaplanis 2014 p 92 a b Makrides 2009 p 136 a b Lamers 2015 p 42 a b c d Ciggaar 1996 p 14 a b c d Ahrweiler amp Laiou 1998 pp vii viii Mango 1980 p 30 Ahrweiler amp Aymard 2000 p 150 Millar Cotton amp Rogers 2004 p 297 Beaton 1996 p 9 Speck amp Takacs 2003 pp 280 281 Malatras 2011 pp 425 7 Hilsdale Cecily J 2014 Byzantine Art and Diplomacy in an Age of Decline Cambridge University Press p 84 ISBN 9781107729384 a b Mango 1965 p 33 Angold 1975 p 65 The new usage of Hellene was limited to a small circle of scholars at the Nicaean court and emphasized the cultural identity of the Byzantines as the heirs of the Ancient Hellenes Page 2008 p 127 it is important to appreciate that this was a limited phenomenon The examples of self identifying Hellenism are actually quite few and do not extend beyond the absolute elite of Nikaia where the terminology of Rhomaios also maintained its hold Angold 2000 p 528 Kaplanis 2014 pp 91 2 Page 2008 p 129 Georgios Steiris 16 October 2015 Argyropoulos John Encyclopedia of Renaissance Philosophy Springer International Publishing p 2 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 02848 4 19 1 ISBN 978 3 319 02848 4 a b Fouracre amp Gerberding 1996 p 345 The Frankish court no longer regarded the Byzantine Empire as holding valid claims of universality instead it was now termed the Empire of the Greeks a b Halsall Paul 1997 Medieval Sourcebook Urban II Speech at Council of Clermont 1095 Five versions of the Speech Fordham University Retrieved 1 December 2009 Runciman 1988 p 9 Holt Andrew January 2005 Massacre of Latins in Constantinople 1182 Crusades Encyclopedia Archived from the original on 29 September 2007 Retrieved 1 December 2009 It is said that more than four thousand Latins of various age sex and condition were delivered thus to barbarous nations for a price In such fashion did the perfidious Greek nation a brood of vipers like a serpent in the bosom or a mouse in the wardrobe evilly requite their guests those who had not deserved such treatment and were far from anticipating anything of the kind those to whom they had given their daughters nieces and sisters as wives and who by long living together had become their friends Haleem 2005 30 The Byzantines Al Rum pp 257 260 Lewis 2000 p 9 The Anatolian peninsula which had belonged to the Byzantine or eastern Roman empire had only relatively recently been conquered by Muslims and even when it came to be controlled by Turkish Muslim rulers it was still known to Arabs Persians and Turks as the geographical area of Rum As such there are a number of historical personages born in or associated with Anatolia known as Rumi literally from Rome Vryonis 1999 p 29 In Turkey it is also referred to unofficially as Fener Rum Patrikhanesi Roman Patriarchate of the Phanar Har El 1995 p 195 Geanakoplos D 1966 Two Worlds of Christendom in Middle Ages and Renaissance in Byzantine East amp West The Academy LiLibrary Harper amp Row Publishers New York Dawkins R M 1916 Modern Greek in Asia Minor A study of dialect of Silly Cappadocia and Pharasa Cambridge Cambridge University Press Maria Constantoudaki Kitromilides in From Byzantium to El Greco p 51 2 Athens 1987 Byzantine Museum of Arts Encyclopaedia Britannica The Phanariots 2008 O Ed Vryonis 1971 Kaldellis 2007 pp 42 43 Voutira 2006 p 384 Sources Adrados Francisco Rodriguez 2005 A History of the Greek Language From its Origins to the Present Leiden Brill Academic Publishers ISBN 978 90 04 12835 4 Ahrweiler Helene Aymard Maurice 2000 Les Europeens Paris Hermann ISBN 978 2 7056 6409 1 Ahrweiler Helene Laiou Angeliki E 1998 Studies on the Internal Diaspora of the Byzantine Empire Washington DC Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection ISBN 978 0 88402 247 3 Alexiou Margaret 2001 After Antiquity Greek Language Myth and Metaphor Ithaca NY Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 3301 6 Angelov Dimiter 2007 Imperial Ideology and Political Thought in Byzantium 1204 1330 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 85703 1 Angold Michael 1975 Byzantine Nationalism and the Nicaean Empire Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 1 1 49 70 doi 10 1179 030701375790158257 S2CID 161584160 Angold Michael 2000 1995 Church and Society in Byzantium under the Comneni 1081 1261 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 26986 5 Asdrachas Spyros I 2005 An Introduction to Greek Economic History Fifteenth to Nineteenth Centuries Fields of Observation and Methodological Issues The Historical Review La Revue Historique 2 7 30 doi 10 12681 hr 181 Baynes Norman Hepburn Moss Henry St Lawrence Beaufort 1948 Byzantium An Introduction to East Roman Civilization Oxford Clarendon Press Beaton Roderick 1996 The Medieval Greek Romance London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 12033 3 Browning Robert 1992 The Byzantine Empire Washington DC Catholic University of America Press ISBN 978 0 8132 0754 4 Browning Robert 1989 History Language and Literacy in the Byzantine World Northampton Variorum Reprints ISBN 9780860782476 Browning Robert 1993 Further Reflections on Literacy in the Byzantine World In John S Langdon et al eds TO ELLHNIKON Studies in Honor of Speros Vryonis Jr Vol 1 Hellenic Antiquity and Byzantium New Rochelle NY Artistide D Caratzas pp 63 84 Cameron Averil 2009 The Byzantines Oxford John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 9833 2 Cavallo Guglielmo 1997 The Byzantines Chicago Illinois University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 09792 3 Ciggaar Krijnie 1996 Western Travellers to Constantinople The West and Byzantium 962 1204 Cultural and Political Relations Leiden E J Brill ISBN 978 90 04 10637 6 Davies Norman 1996 Europe A History Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 820171 7 Dindorfius Ludovicus 1870 Historici Graeci Minores Volume 1 Leipzig B G Teubneri Doumanis Nicholas 2014 14 The Ottoman Roman Empire c 1680 1900 How Empires Shaped a Modern Nation In Aldrich Robert McKenzie Kirsten eds The Routledge History of Western Empires London and New York Routledge Taylor amp Francis Group pp 208 221 ISBN 9781317999874 Earl Donald C 1968 The Age of Augustus New York Exeter Books Paul Elek Productions Incorporated Fouracre Paul Gerberding Richard A 1996 Late Merovingian France History and Hagiography 640 720 Manchester and New York Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 4791 6 Goldhill Simon 2006 Being Greek under Rome Cultural Identity the Second Sophistic and the Development of Empire Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 03087 8 Grierson Philip 1999 Byzantine Coinage Washington DC Dumbarton Oaks ISBN 978 0 88402 274 9 Gross Feliks 1999 Citizenship and Ethnicity The Growth and Development of a Democratic Multiethnic Institution Westport Connecticut Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 30932 8 Haldon John 1999 Warfare State and Society in the Byzantine World 565 1204 London UCL Press ISBN 1 85728 495 X Haleem M A S Abdel 2005 2004 The Qurʼan Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780192831934 Hamilton Bernard 2003 The Christian World of the Middle Ages Stroud Gloucestershire Sutton Pub ISBN 978 0 7509 2405 4 Har El Shai 1995 Struggle for Domination in the Middle East The Ottoman Mamluk War 1485 1491 Leiden E J Brill ISBN 9789004101807 Harrison Thomas 2002 Greeks and Barbarians New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 93958 4 Harvey Alan 1989 Economic Expansion in the Byzantine Empire 900 1200 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 52190 1 Heisenberg August Kromayer Johannes von Wilamowitz Moellendorff Ulrich 1923 Staat und Gesellschaft der Griechen und Romer bis Ausgang des Mittelalters Volume 2 Part 4 Leipzig and Berlin Verlag und Druck von B G Teubner Institute for Balkan Studies 1973 Balkan Studies Biannual Publication of the Institute for Balkan Studies Volume 14 Thessaloniki The Institute History of Europe The Romans Encyclopaedia Britannica United States Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2009 Online Edition Institute for Neohellenic Research 2005 The Historical Review Vol II Athens Institute for Neohellenic Research Kaldellis Anthony 2007 Hellenism in Byzantium The Transformations of Greek Identity and the Reception of the Classical Tradition Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 87688 9 Kakavas George 2002 Post Byzantium The Greek Renaissance 15th 18th Century Treasures from the Byzantine amp Christian Museum Athens Athens Hellenic Ministry of Culture ISBN 978 960 214 053 6 Kaplanis Tassos 2014 Antique Names and Self Identification Hellenes Graikoi and Romaioi from Late Byzantium to the Greek Nation State In Tziovas Dimitris ed Re imagining the Past Antiquity and Modern Greek Culture Oxford Oxford University Press pp 81 97 Kazhdan Alexander Petrovich Constable Giles 1982 People and Power in Byzantium An Introduction to Modern Byzantine Studies Washington DC Dumbarton Oaks ISBN 978 0 88402 103 2 Kitzinger Ernst 1967 Handbook of the Byzantine Collection Washington DC Dumbarton Oaks ISBN 978 0 88402 025 7 Laiou Angeliki E Morrison Cecile 2007 The Byzantine Economy Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 84978 4 Lamers Han 2015 Greece Reinvented Transformations of Byzantine Hellenism in Renaissance Italy Leiden Brill Lapidge Michael Blair John P Keynes Simon Scragg Donald G 1999 The Blackwell Encyclopaedia of Anglo Saxon England Oxford Blackwell ISBN 978 0 631 22492 1 Lewis Franklin 2000 Rumi Past and Present East and West The Life Teachings and Poetry of Jalal al Din Rumi London Oneworld Publication ISBN 9781851682140 Magdalino Paul 1991 Tradition and Transformation in Medieval Byzantium Aldershot Variorum ISBN 978 0 86078 295 7 Makrides Vasilios 2009 Hellenic Temples and Christian Churches A Concise History of the Religious Cultures of Greece from Antiquity to the Present New York New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 9568 2 Malatras Christos 2011 The Making of an Ethnic Group The Romaioi in 12th 13th Century In K A Dimadis ed Taytothtes ston ellhniko kosmo apo to 1204 ews shmera D Eyrwpaiko Synedrio Neoellhnikwn Spoydwn Granada 9 12 Septembrioy 2010 Praktika Vol 3 Athens European Association of Modern Greek Studies pp 419 430 Mango Cyril 1965 Byzantinism and Romantic Hellenism Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 28 29 43 doi 10 2307 750662 JSTOR 750662 S2CID 195042286 Mango Cyril A 1980 Byzantium The Empire of New Rome New York Scribner ISBN 978 0 684 16768 8 Mango Cyril A 2002 The Oxford History of Byzantium Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 814098 6 Merry Bruce 2004 Encyclopedia of Modern Greek Literature Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 30813 0 Meyendorff John 1982 The Byzantine Legacy in the Orthodox Church Crestwood NY St Vladimir s Seminary Press ISBN 978 0 913836 90 3 Millar Fergus Cotton Hannah Rogers Guy MacLean 2004 Rome The Greek World and the East Chapel Hill NC University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 5520 1 Niehoff Maren R 2012 Homer and the Bible in the Eyes of Ancient Interpreters Leiden Brill ISBN 978 9 00 422134 5 Oikonomides Nikolaos 1993 Literacy in Thirteenth century Byzantium An Example from Western Asia Minor In John S Langdon et al eds TO ELLHNIKON Studies in Honor of Speros Vryonis Jr Vol 1 Hellenic Antiquity and Byzantium New Rochelle NY Artistide D Caratzas pp 253 65 Ostrogorsky George 1969 History of the Byzantine State New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press ISBN 978 0 8135 1198 6 Page Gill 2008 Being Byzantine Greek Identity Before the Ottomans 1200 1420 Cambridge University Press Papadopoulou Theodora 2014 The Terms Ῥwmaῖos Ellhn Graikos in the Byzantine Texts in the First Half of the 13th Century Byzantina Symmeikta 24 157 176 doi 10 12681 byzsym 1067 Pontificium Institutum Orientalium Studiorum 2003 Orientalia Christiana Periodica Volume 69 Pontificium Institutum Orientalium Studiorum Rautman Marcus 2006 Daily Life in the Byzantine Empire Westport CT Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 32437 6 Ricks David Magdalino Paul 2016 Byzantium and the modern Greek identity Routledge doi 10 4324 9781315260983 ISBN 9781315260983 Retrieved 17 September 2021 Rosser John H 2011 Introduction Historical Dictionary of Byzantium Lanham MA Scarecrow ISBN 978 0 8108 7567 8 Runciman Steven 1970 The Last Byzantine Renaissance London and New York Cambridge University Press Runciman Steven 1988 1929 The Emperor Romanus Lecapenus and His Reign A Study of Tenth Century Byzantium Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 35722 7 Runciman Steven 1985 The Great Church in Captivity A Study of the Patriarchate of Constantinople from the Eve of the Turkish Conquest to the Greek War of Independence Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 31310 0 Savvides Alexios G C Hendricks Benjamin 2001 Introducing Byzantine History A Manual for Beginners Paris University Herodotos ISBN 978 2 911859 13 7 Speck Paul Takacs Sarolta A 2003 Understanding Byzantium Studies in Byzantine Historical Sources Aldershot Ashgate Variorum ISBN 978 0 86078 691 7 Sphrantzes George 1477 The Chronicle of the Fall Stouraitis Ioannis 2014 Roman Identity in Byzantium A Critical Approach Byzantinische Zeitschrift 107 1 175 220 doi 10 1515 bz 2014 0009 Stouraitis Yannis 2017 Reinventing Roman Ethnicity in High and Late Medieval Byzantium PDF Medieval Worlds 5 70 94 doi 10 1553 medievalworlds no5 2017s70 Vryonis Speros 1971 The Decline of Medieval Hellenism in Asia Minor and the Process of Islamization from the Eleventh through the Fifteenth Century Berkeley CA University of California Press ISBN 978 0 52 001597 5 Vryonis Speros 1999 Greek Identity in the Middle Ages Etudes Balkaniques Byzance et l hellenisme L identite grecque au Moyen Age Paris Association Pierre Belon pp 19 36 Voutira Eftihia A 2006 Post Soviet Diaspora Politics The Case of the Soviet Greeks Journal of Modern Greek Studies 24 2 379 414 doi 10 1353 mgs 2006 0029 S2CID 143703201 Winnifrith Tom Murray Penelope 1983 Greece Old and New London Macmillan ISBN 978 0 333 27836 9 Further readingAhrweiler Helene 1975 L ideologie politique de l Empire byzantin Paris Presses Universitaires de France Charanis Peter 1959 Ethnic Changes in the Byzantine Empire in the Seventh Century Dumbarton Oaks Papers 13 23 44 doi 10 2307 1291127 JSTOR 1291127 Harris Jonathan 2007 Constantinople Capital of Byzantium Hambledon Continuum London Hambledon amp London ISBN 978 1 84725 179 4 Kazhdan Alexander Petrovich ed 1991 The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium New York and Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 Runciman Steven 1966 Byzantine Civilisation London Edward Arnold Publishers Limited ISBN 978 1 56619 574 4 Toynbee Arnold J 1973 Constantine Porphyrogenitus and His World Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 215253 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Byzantine Greeks amp oldid 1129429952, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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