Byzantine Culture in Translation

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This collection on Byzantine culture in translation, edited by Amelia Brown and Bronwen Neil, examines the practices and theories of translation inside the Byzantine empire and beyond its horizons to the east, north and west. The time span is from Late Antiquity to the present day. Translations studied include hagiography, history, philosophy, poetry, architecture and science, between Greek, Latin, Arabic and other languages. These chapters build upon presentations given at the 18th Biennial Conference of the Australian Association for Byzantine Studies, convened by the editors at the University of Queensland in Brisbane, Australia on 28-30 November 2014.

Contributors include: Eva Anagnostou-Laoutides, Amelia Brown, Penelope Buckley, John Burke, Michael Champion, John Duffy, Yvette Hunt, Maria Mavroudi, Ann Moffatt, Bronwen Neil, Roger Scott, Michael Edward Stewart, Rene Van Meeuwen, Alfred Vincent, and Nigel Westbrook.

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Preliminary Material
Editor(s): Amelia Brown and Bronwen Neil
Pages: i–xii
Introduction
Pages: 1–7
General Index
Editor(s): Amelia Brown and Bronwen Neil
Pages: 267–276
Amelia Brown, Ph.D. (UC Berkeley 2008), is senior lecturer in Classics and Ancient History at the University of Queensland in Australia. She works on Hellenic culture in Late Antiquity, and has published articles on Corinth, barbarians and Roman sculpture.

Bronwen Neil, Ph.D. (ACU 2000), FAHA, is Professor of Ancient History at Macquarie University. She has published widely on early Christianity and Late Antiquity, and co-edited a number of volumes including The Oxford Handbook of Maximus the Confessor (2015).

Each essay concludes with an extensive bibliography of primary and secondary sources, and all are informed by meticulous use of evidence and careful argumentation; texts cited in their original language include English translations. Seldom can an essay be categorized within a single discipline such as philology, social history, folklore, Quellenforschung, or material culture because the authors explore their subject matter for its significance in a range of medieval and modern contexts. - Elizabeth A. Fisher, George Washington University, in: Bryn Mawr Classical Review, 2018
Preface
Acknowledgements
List of Illustrations
Abbreviations
List of Contributors

Introduction
Amelia Brown
1 Narrating the Reign of Constantine in Byzantine Chronicles
Roger Scott
2 Breaking Down Barriers: Eunuchs in Italy and North Africa, 400–620
Michael Edward Stewart
3 The Orient Express: Abbot John’s Rapid Trip from Constantinople to Ravenna c. AD 700
Ann Moffatt
4 Bang For His Buck: Dioscorides as a Gift of the Tenth-Century Byzantine Court
Yvette Hunt
5 Nikephoros Phokas as Superhero
John Burke
6 Byzantine Religious Tales in Latin Translation: The Work of John of Amalfi
John Duffy
7 Translations from Greek into Latin and Arabic during the Middle Ages: Searching for the Classical Tradition
Maria Mavroudi
8 A Web of Translations: Planudes in Search of Human Reason
Eva Anagnostou-Laoutides
9 Translating Dorotheus of Gaza: From Gaza to Humanist Europe
Michael Champion
10 The Translation of Constantinople from Byzantine to Ottoman, as Revealed by the Lorck Prospect of the City
Nigel Westbrook and Rene Van Meeuwen
11 Byzantium after Byzantium? Two Greek Writers in Seventeenth-century Wallachia
Alfred Vincent
12 Yeats’s Two Byzantiums
Penelope Buckley
Conclusion: Translating Byzantium in the New Millennium
Bronwen Neil

General Index
All interested in Byzantine culture, history, literature, hagiography or reception, as well as the interactions and translations between Byzantine Greek and neighbouring Latin, Slavic, Turkish or Arabic-language cultures.
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