Cover image for Leo VI and the transformation of Byzantine Christian identity : writings of an unexpected emperor
Title:
Leo VI and the transformation of Byzantine Christian identity : writings of an unexpected emperor
Author:
Riedel, Meredith L. D. (Meredith Leigh Dear), 1967- author.
ISBN:
9781107281967
Physical Description:
1 online resource (xx, 219 pages) : digital, PDF file(s).
General Note:
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 30 Aug 2018).
Contents:
The reign of Leo VI -- Romans imitating Saracens? -- The Byzantine Christian approach to war -- The ideal Christian general -- A new Solomon -- Imperial sacrality in action -- Leo VI as homilist -- Byzantines as chosen people -- Byzantine Christian statecraft.
Abstract:
The Byzantine emperor Leo VI (886-912), was not a general or even a soldier, like his predecessors, but a scholar, and it was the religious education he gained under the tutelage of the patriarch Photios that was to distinguish him as an unusual ruler. This book analyses Leo's literary output, focusing on his deployment of ideological principles and religious obligations to distinguish the characteristics of the Christian oikoumene from the Islamic caliphate, primarily in his military manual known as the Taktika. It also examines in depth his 113 legislative Novels, with particular attention to their theological prolegomena, showing how the emperor's religious sensibilities find expression in his reshaping of the legal code to bring it into closer accord with Byzantine canon law. Meredith L. D. Riedel argues that the impact of his religious faith transformed Byzantine cultural identity and influenced his successors, establishing the Macedonian dynasty as a 'golden age' in Byzantium.
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E-Book 506301-1001 DF592 .R543 2018
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