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English
Edinburgh University Press
22 November 2023
This book provides an in-depth analysis of the social structure of Late Byzantine society (mid 13th-mid 15th c.), including the norms and ideas that governed social relations, and the Byzantine perceptions of their society. It includes an analysis of all social groups, the social networks and the patron-client relations proliferating in this period, and the distribution of social and political power between the different social groups and the state. The deficiencies inherent in Byzantine society are recognised as one of the main factors behind the fragmentation and the collapse of the Byzantine empire.
By:  
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 234mm,  Width: 156mm, 
ISBN:   9781474460880
ISBN 10:   1474460887
Series:   Edinburgh Byzantine Studies
Pages:   608
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
List of Illustrations List of Abbreviations Preface and Acknowledgements Note to the Reader Introduction: Byzantium after 1261: State, Society and Culture The Subject of the Study and the Sources Recent Scholarship on (Late) Byzantine Society Byzantine Society before the Palaiologan Period: Structure and Characteristics Outline Part I: The Earthly Order 1 The Social System The Order (Taxis) of the Empire The Dialectics of Deference and the Social Contract Social Tension and the Challenges to the Established Order 2 Social Status Social Values and Prestige Status Incongruence and Social Ascent 3 Social Stratification Estates and Orders in Byzantium The Rich and the Poor, the Archontes and the Dēmos The Anatomy of the Archontes The Middle Classes and Their Urban Economic Activities The Peasant World Concluding Remarks 4 Social Associations Communities and Vertical Social Groups A Society of Circles and Social Networks The Aristocratic Oikos and Its Following A Fragmented Society 5 Social Power The Basis of Economic Power Political Power State, Church and Society . . . and the Breakdown Part II: Case Studies 6 Late Byzantine Provincial Society: The Example of Serres The Higher Elite in Serres and the Non-local Forces of Economic and Social Influence The Local Military Elite of Serres The Civil (Ecclesiastical) Elite of Serres The Monasteries and Local Society Urban Economic Activities and the Middle Class Social Relations in the Countryside of the Lower Strymon Late Byzantine Provincial Society 7 Late Palaiologan Urban Society: Constantinople at the Turn of the Fifteenth Century Byzantine Society on the Eve of Demise: Developments in the Late Fourteenth Century Economic and Social Life in Constantinople during the Siege of Bāyezīd I (1394–1402) The Fortunes of the Higher and of the ‘Military’ Elite The Civil Elite The Middle Class of Constantinople The Aftermath Conclusion: The Order and the Structures of the Social System Appendices Tables 26–9 Glossary General Terms Late Byzantine Offices, Dignities and Epithets Byzantine Emperors (1261–1453) Alphabetical List of the Official Hierarchy of Titles in Pseudo-Kodinos Alphabetical List of Ecclesiastical Offices Bibliography Primary Sources Secondary Works Index

Christos Malatras has graduated from the University of Crete in Greece (BA and MPhil) and the University of Birmingham in 2013 (Phd). He has since then received fellowships in different institutions in Turkey, Greece, USA and Germany. He has taught Byzantine History in the Democritus University of Thracethe, the University of Thessaly and the University of Ioannina. He has published on social and political history in Late Byzantium, on middle Byzantine provincial administration and sigillography, and on Byzantine identity.

Reviews for Social Stratification in Late Byzantium

This study of late Byzantine social structure is notable for the way the author has abandoned any preconceptions about the character of Byzantine society. These mostly derived from either comparing Byzantium or assimilating it to other societies: the Medieval West in particular. Instead, the author confronts Byzantium on its own terms, thus allowing it to emerge in all its bewildering complexity. If it does not fit any obvious patterns so much the better. Christos Malatras is to be congratulated on a very considerable achievement, which is founded on the mastery of an impressive range of sources. -- Michael Angold, University of Edinburgh


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