Description

Book Synopsis
The aim of this book is to make accessible to a wider audience the works of Nicholas Mesarites, who deserves to be better known than he is. He was an ecclesiastic, who from the turn of the twelfth century provides a vivid record from personal experience of his troubled times, which saw the descent of the Byzantine Empire into factionalism, the loss of its capital Constantinople in 1204 to the armies of the fourth crusade, and its eventual reconstitution in exile as the Empire of Nicaea. Nicholas Mesarites is difficult to place, because the record he left behind was not that of a historian, more that of a social commentator. He preferred to highlight individual incidents and to emphasise personal experience and family relationships. He does not try to make sense of events; only to record their immediate impact. His is a fragmented autobiographical approach, which brings the reader closer to events, but leaves him to construct the bigger picture for himself; whether it is an eyewitness account of a palace coup that failed; a description of the relics of the passion; the memories of a brother, who became a defender of Orthodoxy; the detailed evocation of the Church of the Holy Apostles at Constantinople; the portrayal of his own nervous collapse following the loss of Constantinople; a character study of an ecclesiastical rival; or not least the mishaps -often for comical effect - suffered in the course of his travels. Because he was writing, as he tells us, largely to please himself, Nicholas Mesarites provides an idiosyncratic view of the society in which he moved, and, as he was less bound by literary convention than his contemporaries, he writes with a refreshing directness.

Trade Review
'Angold provides the first comprehensive study of Mesarites and his literary production, a contribution that helps us better situate the writer’s output in the broader picture of the Greek-Orthodox world and its dynamics in the time of fragmentation for the medieval Roman polity.’
Stefanos Dimitriadis, The Byzantine Review

Table of Contents
Preface
Abbreviations

I INTRODUCTION

II NARRATIVE OF THE COUP OF JOHN THE FAT
1. Introduction
2. Translation

III DESCRIPTION OF THE CHURCH OF THE HOLY APOSTLES
1. Introduction
2. Translation

IV EPITAPHIOS FOR HIS BROTHER JOHN
1. Introduction
2. Translation

V DOSSIER ON THE PATRIARCHATE
1. Introduction/Translation

VI FOURTH LENTEN SERMON 1215
1. Introduction
2. Translation

VII ETHOPOIIA OF A MATHEMATICIAN
1. Introduction
2. Translation

VIII LETTERS
1. Letters
2. Synodal Documents

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Nicholas Mesarites: His life and works (in

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    A Hardback by Michael Angold

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      View other formats and editions of Nicholas Mesarites: His life and works (in by Michael Angold

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 05/06/2017
      ISBN13: 9781786940063, 978-1786940063
      ISBN10: 178694006X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The aim of this book is to make accessible to a wider audience the works of Nicholas Mesarites, who deserves to be better known than he is. He was an ecclesiastic, who from the turn of the twelfth century provides a vivid record from personal experience of his troubled times, which saw the descent of the Byzantine Empire into factionalism, the loss of its capital Constantinople in 1204 to the armies of the fourth crusade, and its eventual reconstitution in exile as the Empire of Nicaea. Nicholas Mesarites is difficult to place, because the record he left behind was not that of a historian, more that of a social commentator. He preferred to highlight individual incidents and to emphasise personal experience and family relationships. He does not try to make sense of events; only to record their immediate impact. His is a fragmented autobiographical approach, which brings the reader closer to events, but leaves him to construct the bigger picture for himself; whether it is an eyewitness account of a palace coup that failed; a description of the relics of the passion; the memories of a brother, who became a defender of Orthodoxy; the detailed evocation of the Church of the Holy Apostles at Constantinople; the portrayal of his own nervous collapse following the loss of Constantinople; a character study of an ecclesiastical rival; or not least the mishaps -often for comical effect - suffered in the course of his travels. Because he was writing, as he tells us, largely to please himself, Nicholas Mesarites provides an idiosyncratic view of the society in which he moved, and, as he was less bound by literary convention than his contemporaries, he writes with a refreshing directness.

      Trade Review
      'Angold provides the first comprehensive study of Mesarites and his literary production, a contribution that helps us better situate the writer’s output in the broader picture of the Greek-Orthodox world and its dynamics in the time of fragmentation for the medieval Roman polity.’
      Stefanos Dimitriadis, The Byzantine Review

      Table of Contents
      Preface
      Abbreviations

      I INTRODUCTION

      II NARRATIVE OF THE COUP OF JOHN THE FAT
      1. Introduction
      2. Translation

      III DESCRIPTION OF THE CHURCH OF THE HOLY APOSTLES
      1. Introduction
      2. Translation

      IV EPITAPHIOS FOR HIS BROTHER JOHN
      1. Introduction
      2. Translation

      V DOSSIER ON THE PATRIARCHATE
      1. Introduction/Translation

      VI FOURTH LENTEN SERMON 1215
      1. Introduction
      2. Translation

      VII ETHOPOIIA OF A MATHEMATICIAN
      1. Introduction
      2. Translation

      VIII LETTERS
      1. Letters
      2. Synodal Documents

      BIBLIOGRAPHY

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