2016
DOI: 10.1017/byz.2015.2
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Res publica Byzantina? State formation and issues of identity in medieval east Rome

Abstract: It is a great pleasure and an honour to be writing for the fortieth anniversary volume of Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies. As editor of the journal for some twenty years, from 1984 until 2004, I have watched the journal grow in stature and in esteem over that period, and I am delighted to see it continuing to do so in the hands of its current editors. In the first issue I edited, I also contributed an article that attempted to reconcile some very different approaches to the history of Byzantine society and … Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…6, by Cheynet) that there was no conception of a common interest that held the provinces together as well as the notion that there was no robust sense of public interest that included commoners and elites alike. 7 This issue is also relevant to the chapter contributed by the editor of the volume, Yannis Stouraitis (chap. 1).…”
Section: The Imperial Ideamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…6, by Cheynet) that there was no conception of a common interest that held the provinces together as well as the notion that there was no robust sense of public interest that included commoners and elites alike. 7 This issue is also relevant to the chapter contributed by the editor of the volume, Yannis Stouraitis (chap. 1).…”
Section: The Imperial Ideamentioning
confidence: 99%