The last thing I promised I’d write about from the quarter-slice of 2017 through which this blog’s backlog is presently proceeding was the 50th Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies, from 25th to 27th March of that year. There are plenty of stories that could be told about this conference, starting with the whole story of the Spring Symposium, which has, as that title suggests, been happening for 50 years, rotating away from and back to Birmingham like a short-duration comet; or one could tell the story of its founder, Anthony Bryer, who had died the previous year and so was being extensively commemorated here; or how it had fallen in this year upon Professor Leslie Brubaker and my two erstwhile Barber Institute collaborators, Rebecca Darley and Daniel Reynolds, to organise it (which earns one the title of ‘Symposiarch’); but for me the chief story is probably always going to be how I arrived as a guest and was converted to presenter at twenty minutes’ notice and still more or less got away with it. So if that intrigues you, or if an international conference on Byzantine Studies does indeed, read on, and for the rest of you, since this post is long, I shall simply set out the running order of what I saw, then stick a cut in and expound at greater length beyond it. So! Here we go.
By now-ancient tradition, the organisation of the Spring Symposium wherever it is held is two-level, with keynote lectures and plenary sessions to which the whole gathering can go at one level, and at the other ‘communications’, these being shorter papers which run in parallel strands. On this occasion there was also a third part, in the form of a postgraduate workshop following the main proceedings. All this together means that my academic itinerary through the conference went like this:
- 25th March
- Michael Whitby, “Welcome”
- Leslie Brubaker, “What is Global Byzantium?”
- Catherine Holmes, “Global Byzantium: a Whirlwind Romance or Fundamental Paradigm Shift?”
- Rebecca Darley, “India in the Byzantine Worldview”
- Antony Eastmond, “Constantinople: Local Centre and Global Peripheries”
- Francesca dell’Acqua, “What about Greek(s) in Eighth- and Ninth-Century Italy?”
- Matthew Kinloch, “Historiographies of Reconquest: Constantinople, Iberia and the Danelaw”
- Maroula Perisanidi, “Clerical Marriage in Comparative Perspective”
- Kristian Hansen-Schmidt, “Constantine’s Μονοχυλα: Canoe or Viking Ship?”
- Lauren Wainwright, “Import, Export: the Global Impact of Byzantine Marriage Alliances during the 10th Century”
- Jeffrey Brubaker, “What is Byzantine about ‘Byzantine Diplomacy’?”
- Adrián Elías Negro Cortes, “Tributes Linked to Military Actions in Both Ends of the Mediterranean: from Byzantium to Spain”
- Corisande Fenwick, “Forgotten Africa and the Global Middle Ages”
- Tim Greenwood, “Composing History at the Margins of Empire: Armenian Chronicles in Comparative Perspective”
- John Haldon, “A ‘Global’ Empire: the Structures of East Roman Longevity”
- Robin Milner-Gulland, “Ultimate Russia – Ultimate Byzantium”
- Liz James, “Byzantine Art – A Global Art? Looking beyond Byzantium”
- Hugh Kennedy, “The State as an Econmic Actor in Byzantium and the Caliphate c. 650-c. 950: A Cross-Cultural Comparison”
- Angeliki Lymberopoulou, “‘Maniera Greca’ and Renaissance Europe: More Than Meets the Eye”
- Henry Maguire, “Magical Signs in Byzantium and Islam: A Global Language”
- Julia Galliker, “Silk in the Byzantine World: Transmission and Technology”
- Eduardo Manzano Moreno, “Attracting Poles: Byzantium, al-Andalus and the Shaping of the Mediterranean in the 10th Century”
- Claudia Rapp, “Secluded Place or Global Magnet? The Monastery of Saint Catherine on the Sinai and its Manuscript Collection”
- Robert Ousterhout, “The ‘Helladic Paradigm’ in a Global Perspective”
- Arietta Papaconstantinou, “Spice Odysseys: Exotic ‘Stuff’ and its Imaginary”
- Hajnalka Herold, “How Byzantine was 9th-Century Moravia? An Archaeological Perspective”
- Nik Matheou, “New Rome & Caucasia, c. 900-1100: Empire, Elitedom and Identity in a Global Perspective”
- Alexandra Vukovich, “A Facet of Byzantium’s Ideological Reach: the Case of Byzantine Imitation Coins”
- Andrew Small, “‘From the Halls of Tadmakka to the Shores of Sicily’: Byzantine Italy and Sub-Saharan Africa in the 11th century”, read by Nik Matheou
- Flavia Vanni, “Transferring Skills and Techniques across the Mediterranean: Some Preliminary Remarks on Stucco in Italy and Byzantium”
- Peter Sarris, “Centre or Periphery? Constantinople and the Eurasian Trading System at the End of Antiquity”
- Linda Safran, “Teaching Byzantine Art in China: Some Thoughts on Global Reception”
- Daniel Reynolds, “Jerusalem and the Fabrication of a Global City”
- Fotini Kondyli, “Material Culture”
- Margaret Mullett, “Global Literature”
- Joanna Story, “The View from… the West”
- Scott Redford, “Byzantium and the Islamic World: Global Perspectives?”
- Naomi Standen, “East Asia”
- Chris Wickham, “Final Remarks”
Coffee break
Lunch
Tea
Champagne Bus and Conference Dinner1
26th March
Coffee
Lunch and Auction
Tea
Wine Reception
27th March
Coffee, then a closing round table session as follows:
That’s exhausting even to have typed out, and I certainly can’t come up with something to say about every paper at three years’ remove without basically repeating my already-somewhat illegible notes, so instead I’ll try to pull some general trends out of that list and then focus particularly on the theme and people’s approaches to it. What with me not really being a Byzantinist, that may mean a slightly odd selection, but you’re used to that, I know. Everybody involved deserves a better press than this will give them, but there just isn’t sensible space.2 In any case, now you can see what the rest of the post may look like, this is a good place for the cut and then the deeply interested can continue at their leisure. Continue reading