Church and Society in Byzantium under the Comneni, 1081–1261

Author: Michael Angold  

Publisher: Cambridge University Press‎

Publication year: 2000

E-ISBN: 9780511890116

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780521269865

Subject: K3 Asian History

Keyword: 亚洲史

Language: ENG

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Church and Society in Byzantium under the Comneni, 1081–1261

Description

In this major study the theme of 'church and society' provides a means of examining the condition of the Byzantine Empire at an important period of its history, up to and well beyond the fall of Constantinople in 1204. Of all the Byzantine dynasties, the Comneni came closest to realising the Caesaro-papist ideal. However, Comnenian control over the Orthodox church was both deceptive and damaging: deceptive because the church's institutional strength increased, and with it its hold over lay society, damaging because the church's leadership was demoralised by subservience to imperial authority. The church found itself with the strength but not the will to assert itself against an imperial establishment that was in rapid decline by 1180; and neither side was in a position to provide Byzantine society with a sense of purpose. This lack of direction lay at the heart of the malaise that afflicted Byzantium at the time of the fourth crusade. The impasse was resolved after 1204, when in exile the Orthodox church took the lead in reconstructing Byzantine society.

Chapter

2 Alexius I Comnenus and the church

3 Church and politics under Manuel I Comnenus

4 The failure of the Comnenian church settlement

PART III: THE BISHOP AND LOCAL SOCIETY

5 The framework

6 Theophylact of Ohrid

7 Michael Italikos and George Tornikes

8 Eustathius of Thessalonica

9 Michael Choniates

10 John Apokaukos

11 George Bardanes

12 Demetrius Chomatianos

PART IV: MONASTERIES AND SOCIETY

13 Alexius I Comnenus and monasticism

14 Manuel I Comnenus and the monasteries

15 The role of the monasteries under the Comneni

16 The monastic estate and society

17 Lay patronage and the monasteries

18 The condition of the monasteries under the Comneni

PART V: RELIGION AND SOCIETY

19 Lay piety: framework and assumptions

20 Law and marriage

21 Byzantine women

22 Lay piety at Byzantium: beliefs and customs

23 The Bogomils

PART VI: EXILE 1204-1261

24 Byzantium and the Latins

25 Imperial authority and the orthodox church

Bibliography

Index

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