Unit BYZANTINE HISTORY

Course
Classical culture
Study-unit Code
GP005351
Curriculum
In all curricula
Teacher
Rita Lizzi
Teachers
  • Rita Lizzi
Hours
  • 36 ore - Rita Lizzi
CFU
6
Course Regulation
Coorte 2020
Offered
2021/22
Learning activities
Affine/integrativa
Area
Attività formative affini o integrative
Academic discipline
L-FIL-LET/07
Type of study-unit
Opzionale (Optional)
Type of learning activities
Attività formativa monodisciplinare
Contents
- The Byzantine Empire from 330 to 1453: Political, Cultural and Religious History from Constantine the Great to the Islamic conquest
- The West looking to the East: Rome's Senate, Senators and Bishops (476-554 AD)
Reference texts
For those attending:

General part:

– One textbook of your choice from the list below:

Averil Cameron, The Byzantines, Oxford 2006, anche in traduzione italiana: I bizantini, Il Mulino, Bologna 2008
Georg Ostrogorsky, Geschichte des byzantinischen Staates, München 1963, anche in traduzione italiana: Storia dell’impero bizantino, Torino, 1968
Giorgio Ravegnani, Introduzione alla storia bizantina, Il Mulino, Bologna 2006
Warren Treadgold, A Concise History of Byzantium, New York 2001, anche in traduzione italiana: Storia di Bisanzio, Bologna 2005

Monographic part:

Ravegnani, I Bizantini in Italia, Il Mulino, Bologna, 2004
R. Lizzi Testa, Costantino tra fede, economia e politica: privilegi fiscali, costruzioni sacre, in Tessa Canella (a cura di), L’impero costantiniano e i luoghi sacri, Bologna, Il Mulino 2016, 147-90

R. Lizzi Testa, Un Occidente che guarda ad Est: senato, senatori e vescovi di Roma (476-554d.C), in L’eredità di Giustiniano. L’ultima guerra dell’Italia romana (Pisa, Scuola Normale 23-24 ottobre 2019), in press

For non-attending students:

Giorgio Ravegnani, Introduzione alla storia bizantina, Il Mulino, Bologna 2006
Averil Cameron, The Byzantines, Oxford 2006, anche in traduzione italiana: I bizantini, Il Mulino, Bologna 2008
Giorgio Ravegnani, I Bizantini in Italia, Il Mulino, Bologna, 2004
R. Lizzi Testa, Costantino tra fede, economia e politica: privilegi fiscali, costruzioni sacre, in Tessa Canella (a cura di), L’impero costantiniano e i luoghi sacri, Bologna, Il Mulino 2016, 147-90
R. Lizzi Testa, Un Occidente che guarda ad Est: senato, senatori e vescovi di Roma (476-554d.C), in L’eredità di Giustiniano. L’ultima guerra dell’Italia romana (Pisa, Scuola Normale 23-24 ottobre 2019), in press.
Educational objectives
Knowledge of the main events in the history and culture of the Byzantine Empire.
Acquisition of basic skills in the use of sources and bibliographical tools related to Byzantine history.
Prerequisites
To take this course, the student must have already passed an examination in Roman History and have a basic knowledge of Medieval History as well as Ancient Christian literature. Ability to read Latin and (possibly) Greek texts.
Teaching methods
The course is organised as follows:
- Lectures on all topics and issues related to Byzantine history.
- Short lectures/debates given by the students as an in-depth study of the topics dealt with in the course.
Learning verification modality
The examination includes a final oral test (on the official dates scheduled in the calendar), which consists of a discussion-colloquium on the topics dealt with during the course and examined in depth in the recommended texts. The test is designed to ascertain the level of knowledge reached by the students, their ability to make connections and to briefly explain the main historical issues addressed in the course. The duration of the examination varies according to the progress of the test itself.
Extended program
The course will be organized in two parts: (A) a general part of history and historiography on the Byzantine age; and (B) a monographic part on a specific research topic.

A- History of the Byzantine Empire from the foundation of Constantinople in 330 A.D. to the Islamic conquest in 1453: 1- Constantine the Great and the relationship between Empire and Church in the 4th century. 2- The division of the empire and the confrontation between Rome and Constantinople. 3- The primacy of Rome from Leo the Great to Gelasius. 4- The age of Theoderic the Great. 5- Justinian and 'Caesaropapism'. 7- The Age of Heraclius and Islamic expansion. 8- Iconoclasm and its impact on the Byzantine presence in Italy. 9- The Macedonian dynasty. 10- The Comnenes and the Angels; 11- The Crusades and their effects on Byzantium. 12- The Latin Empire; 13- The Palaeologues. 14- The fall of Constantinople.

B- Senate, senators and bishops of Rome (476-554d.C): a series of documents (papal letters and letters collected in the Variae of Cassiodorus) allow to reconstruct the relations between East and West of the Empire around and after the Gothic war and the incidence that, in the varying relations between the two partes of the empire, had the collaboration between Western senators, bishops of Rome and Gothic kings in relation to the Eastern emperor from Zeno to Justinian.
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