The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium is a three-volume, comprehensive dictionary of Byzantine civilization. The first resource of its kind in the field, it features over 5,000 entries written by an international group of eminent Byzantinists covering all aspects of life in the Byzantine world.
According to Alexander Kazhdan, editor-in-chief of the Dictionary: "Entries on patriarchy and emperors will coexist with entries on surgery and musical instruments. An entry on the cultivation of grain will not only be connected to entries on agriculture and its economics but on diet, the baking of
bread, and the role of bread in this changing society."
Major entries treat such topics as agriculture, art, literature, and politics, while shorter entries examine topics that relate to Byzantium such as the history of Kiev and personalities of ancient and biblical history. Each article is followed by a bibliography, and numerous maps, tables,
architectural designs, and genealogies reinforce and clarify the text.
The new ODB will be the standard research tool and reference work for Byzantinists from graduate students to advanced scholars, and an essential resource for college and school libraries. It will also be an invaluable guide for classicists, Western medievalists, Islamicists, Slavicists, art
historians, religious historians, and scholars of archaeology.
UK-based Contributors: Thomas S. Brown, Senior Lecturer in Medieval History, University of Edinburgh. Robert Browning, Professor Emeritus of Classics, University of London. David Buckton, Curator of Early Christian and Byzantine Collections, British Museum. Lawrence I. Conrad, Lecturer in Arab-Islamic Medicine, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, London. Simon Franklin, Lecturer in Russian, University of Cambridge. Philip Grierson, Professor Emeritus of Numismatics, University of Cambridge. John Lowden, Lecturer in Art History, University of London. R. J. Macrides, Honorary Lecturer in Byzantine Studies and Modern Greek, University of St Andrews. Paul Magdalino, Lecturer in Medieval History, University of St Andrews. Cyril Mango, Bywater and Sotheby Professor of Byzantine and Modern Greek Language and Literature, University of Oxford. Marlia Mango, Art historian, Oxford. Sir Dimitri Obolensky, Professor Emeritus of Russian and Balkan History, University of Oxford. Nigel Wilson, Fellow and Tutor in Classics, University of Oxford.
Show moreThe Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium is a three-volume, comprehensive dictionary of Byzantine civilization. The first resource of its kind in the field, it features over 5,000 entries written by an international group of eminent Byzantinists covering all aspects of life in the Byzantine world.
According to Alexander Kazhdan, editor-in-chief of the Dictionary: "Entries on patriarchy and emperors will coexist with entries on surgery and musical instruments. An entry on the cultivation of grain will not only be connected to entries on agriculture and its economics but on diet, the baking of
bread, and the role of bread in this changing society."
Major entries treat such topics as agriculture, art, literature, and politics, while shorter entries examine topics that relate to Byzantium such as the history of Kiev and personalities of ancient and biblical history. Each article is followed by a bibliography, and numerous maps, tables,
architectural designs, and genealogies reinforce and clarify the text.
The new ODB will be the standard research tool and reference work for Byzantinists from graduate students to advanced scholars, and an essential resource for college and school libraries. It will also be an invaluable guide for classicists, Western medievalists, Islamicists, Slavicists, art
historians, religious historians, and scholars of archaeology.
UK-based Contributors: Thomas S. Brown, Senior Lecturer in Medieval History, University of Edinburgh. Robert Browning, Professor Emeritus of Classics, University of London. David Buckton, Curator of Early Christian and Byzantine Collections, British Museum. Lawrence I. Conrad, Lecturer in Arab-Islamic Medicine, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, London. Simon Franklin, Lecturer in Russian, University of Cambridge. Philip Grierson, Professor Emeritus of Numismatics, University of Cambridge. John Lowden, Lecturer in Art History, University of London. R. J. Macrides, Honorary Lecturer in Byzantine Studies and Modern Greek, University of St Andrews. Paul Magdalino, Lecturer in Medieval History, University of St Andrews. Cyril Mango, Bywater and Sotheby Professor of Byzantine and Modern Greek Language and Literature, University of Oxford. Marlia Mango, Art historian, Oxford. Sir Dimitri Obolensky, Professor Emeritus of Russian and Balkan History, University of Oxford. Nigel Wilson, Fellow and Tutor in Classics, University of Oxford.
Show moreUK-based Contributors: Thomas S. Brown, Senior Lecturer in Medieval History, University of Edinburgh. Robert Browning, Professor Emeritus of Classics, University of London. David Buckton, Curator of Early Christian and Byzantine Collections, British Museum. Lawrence I. Conrad, Lecturer in Arab-Islamic Medicine, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, London. Simon Franklin, Lecturer in Russian, University of Cambridge. Philip Grierson, Professor Emeritus of Numismatics, University of Cambridge. John Lowden, Lecturer in Art History, University of London. R. J. Macrides, Honorary Lecturer in Byzantine Studies and Modern Greek, University of St Andrews. Paul Magdalino, Lecturer in Medieval History, University of St Andrews. Cyril Mango, Bywater and Sotheby Professor of Byzantine and Modern Greek Language and Literature, University of Oxford. Marlia Mango, Art historian, Oxford. Sir Dimitri Obolensky, Professor Emeritus of Russian and Balkan History, University of Oxford. Nigel Wilson, Fellow and Tutor in Classics, University of Oxford.
Reference Reviews Awards: Best Specialist Reference Work 1991^L Winner of R R Hawkins Award 1991 for the most outstanding professional reference or scholarly work (awarded by the professional and scholarly publishing division of the Association of American Publishers)
"This reference work is a major event for Byzantine studies....This
is a remarkable accomplishment, one that both specialists and the
educated public will find useful."--Speculum
"An indispensable reference tool for Byzantinists and Western
medievalists, as well as an authoritative source for the more
casual reader."--Religious Studies Review
"A landmark achievement that has no peer....Can be recommended
wholeheartedly as an indispensable reference work of great
worth."--Missiology
"The editor deserves special thanks for the uniformly lucid and
readable style, for the clear illustrations, and for the useful
maps....This will endure as the first book the beginning student or
the advanced scholar will reach for on the 1100-year history of
Byzantium. Academic, large public, and research libraries must
acquire this treasure."--Library Journal
"The student of religion and the theologian will find much of
interest throughout these three tomes."--Theological Studies
"A necessary addition for college and university libraries at all
levels."--CHOICE
"A magnificent project and will prove to be one of the most
significant scholarly resources in the last quarter of the 20th
century."--Review & Expositor
"Throughout there is a welcome attention to realia and to daily
life....The ODB now joins the OCD and the ODCC as an essential
reference work for every academic or public library."--Religious
Studies Review
"No respectable library can afford to forgo the immediate purchase
of the Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium, because it will be cited
throughout the world, as the scholarly reference on all matters
Byzantine."--Biblical Archaeology Review
"Satisfies a long-felt need for a comprehensive reference work on
the Eastern empire....There is no other reference work that covers
the Byzantine world as thoroughly as the ODB....An essential
purchase for academic collections supporting curricula in art
history or medieval studies."--RBB/Booklist
"The diversity is quite remarkable....The whole scholarly world is
in debt to its editors and contributors."--Church History
"The absorbing story of the Byzantine world...is at long last
provided with a standard encyclopedia of large size and high
quality. This Oxford Press masterpiece runs to nearly 2300
pages."--Henry Chadwick, Church Times
"A major breakthrough....A tour de force....The last question posed
by these magnificent volumes is the most insistent of all. Spending
as I do a good deal of my time writing about Byzantium, how did I
ever manage without them?"--John Julius Norwich, The Daily
Telegraph
"One would be hard pressed to find a more comprehensive dictionary
than this one on Byzantine history and civilization....An
incredibly useful and interesting reference work. Highly
recommended."--Reference Book Review
"Obviously Byzantine scholarship can only derive unprecedented
benefit from a dictionary of this scale and magnitude."--Times
Literary Supplement
"Important for the institutional, intellectual, liturgical, and
artistic development and achievements of Eastern
Christianity."--ADRIS Newsletter
"Opens up to the light of day a subject still too often shrouded in
prejudice and half-knowledge. It effectively sets out a cultural
history of Byzantium, in an attractive and accessible format...[I]t
will make teaching Byzantium on a wider scale a real
possibility."--Times Higher Education Supplement
"You may find it hard to put down. It's well-written, superbly
edited and includes genealogical tables, chronologies, maps,
architectural plans and many black-and-white photographs of
churches, icons, paintings, manuscripts, illuminations, coins and
other cultural objects."--The Canberra Times
"This volume is a great boon to Byzantinists and all who deal with
Byzantine sources; it will promote interdisciplinary work by making
the state of research in this fascinating but complex field more
readily accessible."--The Classical Journal
"A landmark in scholarship."--Studies in Medieval and Renaissance
History
"Like all Oxford works, this reference work will be a valuable and
welcome addition to every institutional library."--Currents in
Theology and Mission
"Scholars in various humanistic disciplines anxious to broaden
their horizons could profit enormously from access to such a
reference work."--Religious Studies Review
"Ambitious...It tackles new fields which have yet to be studied
seriously...A useful work of reference for students of Byzantine
Studies at all levels."--Mary Cuningham Corran
"An achievement in itself and the presence of A. Cutler as editor
for art history augurs well for the venture which in its
editor-in-chief, has, perhaps the most fertile and profoundly
original mind at work in Byzantine studies today."--Journal of
Ecclesiastical History
"The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium, the first dictionary entirely
devoted to Byzantium, is not just a welcome addition to the growing
number of works on the Empire. It has the rare virtue of providing
historians with an updated account of the state of research, while
at the same [time] opening the Byzantine field to the student and
the inquisitive layman. An impressive interdisciplinary
work...which deserves full credit for its initiative....A
remarkable achievement. It will undoubtedly serve as a standard
reference work not only for those directly concerned with
Byzantium, but also for classicists, archaeologists, historians of
art and religion, as well as
those dealing with the medieval West, Islam, and the Slavic,
Armenian, and Turkic peoples. It is an indispensable tool of
learning that should be available in any scholarly or public
library."--Mediterranean Historical Review
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |