Perceiving, interpreting, teaching Byzantine liturgical poetry. Nikephoros Kallistou Xanthopoulos’ treatises on hymns

Bernard Mulholland, Early Byzantine Ireland: a survey of the archaeological evidence (2021).
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Funded by FWF, ESPRIT programme, Project number ESP 269-G. The project, hosted by the Department of Byzantine Research of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, is led by Maria-Lucia Goiana and mentored by Claudia Rapp. It aims to address Xanthopoulos’ three treatises on hymns—on the anabathmoi of the Oktoechos; on various types of hymns; on the Mariological troparion Τὴν τιμιωτέραν τῶν Χερουβίμ—as witnesses to aspects of education and scholarship in Byzantium, and thus to unlock for the first time in a comprehensive case-study the potential of such commentaries for a better understanding of Byzantine contexts of transmission of knowledge. Special emphasis will be placed on the manuscripts transmitting Xanthopoulos’ treatises as complex sociocultural objects, revealing information on how the texts circulated, were read and studied by generations of users. For further information, please contact Maria-Lucia Goiana (Maria-Lucia.Goiana@oeaw.ac.at) and check the project’s website.

18th International Congress of Christian Archaeology

The Institute of Archaeology, Belgrade, will host the 18th International Congress of Christian Archaeology in 2024. The congress has a special place in the fields of Early Christian archaeology and Late Roman studies, with a tradition established in 1894. The Congress will be organised in cooperation with the main institutions of protection, culture and education from the Republic of Serbia, such as the National Museum of Serbia and the Faculty of Philosophy of the Belgrade University. It will provide an excellent forum for the promotion and presentation of Christian cultural heritage, together with a thematic exhibition that will be organised at that time at the National Museum of Serbia in Belgrade and the excursion to Sremska Mitrovica – the Late Roman capital of Sirmium which hosted emperors, where church councils took place and which was home to many martyrs.

The Congress will present a broad range of topics stemming from its title, organised as follows:

I OPENING KEYNOTE LECTURE

Early Christianity between Liturgical Practice and Everyday Life

II GENERAL THEMES

Church history and sources

Liturgical practice

Epigraphy and prosopography

Urbanism and topography

Architecture

Sculpture, painting and mosaic

Minor arts and numismatics

Funeral practice

Everyday life

Call for Papers: Final Conference of the Leibniz Prize Project: The Polyphony of Late Antique Christianity: The Polycentricity of Late Antiquity

https://www.geschichte.uni-frankfurt.de/132661842/Generic_132661842.pdf?

In Late Antiquity, Constantinople developed into the undisputed capital of the Eastern Roman Empire, gaining ever more central functions for what remained of the Roman Empire (Pfeilschifter 2013). At the same time, numerous decentralising tendencies can be observed.
Many Romans were aware that the Roman Empire was at best only one eye of the world, and the Persian Empire the second (Canepa 2009). Moreover, new centres formed in areas of the West that were beyond imperial control (Meier 2021), sometimes centres of a local Romanitas (Brown 2012), as shown, for example, by the flowering of courtly Latin poetry in the Vandal Empire.
In addition to the politically defined centres, a network of ecclesiastical centres, the so-called patriarchates, existed in the Roman Mediterraneum and had established themselves by the 5th century. Among them, the patriarchates of Alexandria, Antioch and Rome were considered centres of Christianity early on. In addition, Constantinople gained in ecclesiastical political importance from the 4th century onward, but Rome always remained the most important ecclesiastical centre, even in times of greatest political weakness (Kötter 2013).
The rivalry between the provincial capital Caesarea and Jerusalem, which was outstanding from a religious point of view, is another example of the negotiation of the relationship between different centre functions. With pilgrimage and the appearance of highly respected saints, such as the two Stylites named Symeon, new centres emerged for a time (Parker 2022). In addition, heretical groups such as the Church of the East formed centres of their
own. The Caucasus was on the one hand dependent on the great empires and on the other hand oriented to its own centres (Dorfmann-Lazarev 2022). For all Mediterranean Jews, Babylon was a centre located in the Sasanid Empire.
The network of intellectual centres was structured differently still. Here, the college of Constantinople played an important role, but Beirut also formed a centre of legal education that made a man like Libanios fear that Antioch would lose its importance (Van Hoof 2014). Undeniably, Athens and Alexandria remained centres of philosophy. While Athens was little more than an educational centre, Alexandria was also an ecclesiastical centre and possessed
great political and administrative importance. Individuals such as Jacob of Sarug (Forness 2018) or Augustine could be considered centres because they acted as a hub for correspondence (Preuß 2022). With Arab expansion, entirely new centres emerged (Berger 2016).
With regard to Nubia and Ethiopia, Alexandria possessed the centre function that pointed beyond the borders of the Roman Empire. It had this in common with Jerusalem, for example, but also with Edessa, a centre of Syrophonous Christians, which from the Roman perspective was a place on the periphery (approaches in Leppin 2021). This also shows the importance of ultilingualism for the polycentricity of the Roman Empire. The multitude of places that could be considered centres, the variety of centre functions, the transboundary
character of some centres all illustrate how complex the topic is. The conference aims to advance discussion on these issues and to bring relevant researchers into closer contact.
Key notes will be presented by Felix Maier (Zurich), Phil Forness (Leuven) and Igor Dorfmann-Lazarev (London).
The call is based on a broad understanding of Late Antiquity (4th-7th centuries). Contributions on individual centres or on their comparison are invited, but also theoretically inspired reflections on the formation of centres and on practices on the basis of which centres could be recognised. The call for papers is open to advanced doctoral and post-doctoral students in history, classical philology, archaeology, theology, Jewish studies, Syrology, Coptic studies, Caucasian studies, Iranian studies, Islamic Studies and related fields. Papers should be no more than 25 minutes in length to allow room for discussion. The conference language will be English. Accommodation costs and travel expenses will be reimbursed.
Deliberately, no publication is planned. Therefore, preliminary work for larger books can be presented, but it is also welcome to experiment and think outside the box.
Please send your proposals with abstracts (not more than 250 words) and a CV (up to one page) by April 15, 2023, to Marius Kalfelis (kalfelis@em.uni-frankfurt.de).
Lutz Berger, Die Entstehung des Islam. Die ersten hundert Jahre, München 2016.
Peter Brown, Through the Eye of a Needle. Wealth, the Fall of Rome and the Making of Christianity in the West, 350-550 AD, Princeton / Oxford 2012.
Matthew P. Canepa, The Two Eyes of the Earth: Art and Ritual of Kingship between Rome and Sasanian Iran (The Transformation of the Classical Heritage 45), Berkeley etc. 2009.
Igor Dorfmann-Lazarev (ed.), Sharing Myths, Texts, and Sanctuaries in South Caucasus (Studies in Early Christian Apocrypha 19), Leuven 2022.
Philip Forness, Preaching Christology in the Roman Near East: A Study of Jacob of Serugh, Oxford 2018.
Jan-Markus Kötter, Zwischen Kaiser und Aposteln. Das Akakianische Schisma (484–519) als kirchlicher Ordnungskonflikt der Spätantike (Roma Æterna 2), Stuttgart 2013.
Hartmut Leppin, Creating a City of Believers – Rabbula of Edessa, in A. Lätzer-Lasar, E. R. Urciuoli (Hg.), Urban Religion in Late Antiquity, Berlin 2021, 185-204.
Mischa Meier, Geschichte der Völkerwanderung. Europa, Asien und Afrika vom 3. bis zum 8.
Jahrhundert n. Chr., 7. Aufl. München 2021.
Lucy Parker, Symeon Stylites the Younger and Late Antique Antioch. From Hagiography to History, Oxford 2022.
Rene Pfeilschifter, Der Kaiser und Konstantinopel. Kommunikation und Konfliktaustrag in einer spätantiken Metropole (= Millennium-Studien. Studien zu Kultur und Geschichte des ersten Jahrtausends n. Chr. Band 44), Berlin u. a. 2013.
Kai Preuß, Säkularität und Pastoral. Geschichte, Macht, Subjekt, Berlin/Boston 2022.
Victor Turner, The Center out There: Pilgrim’s Goal, History of Religion 12 (1973), 191-230.
Lieve Van Hoof, Libanius: A Critical Introduction, Cambridge, New York 2014.

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