Session 1: Introduction to Byzantine Literature and Art Devoted to Saints and Holy (Wo)Men Saints and Holy (Wo)Men in Byzantine Literature and Art Dr. Christodoulos PAPAVARNAVAS (Austrian Academy of Sciences) ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART The Agenda for the Day • Terms and Concepts • Course Outline • Bibliographical Tools ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Terms and Concepts • Byzantium • Literature • Hagiographical Literature (‘Hagiography’):  Holiness/Sanctity  Hagiographical Genres ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Byzantium The City at Bosphorus • Byzantion (7th cent. BC – 330 AD) • Constantinople (330 – 1453)* * 330: foundation of Constantinople (324: the reign of Emperor Constantine the Great and the new capital of the Roman Empire) • Istanbul (since 1453 – today)* *1453: Constantinople was conquered by the Ottoman Empire. ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Byzantium The Three Components of Byzantium • Culture and Language: Greek • Polity/Governmental System: Roman • Religion: Christian ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Literature Literariness – Literary Dimensions / Literary Nuance • This is NOT about the content / subject matter of a text! • Literariness is to be found in the way the content is presented in a text:  Style/Diction (e.g., linguistic and rhetorical means, choice of words, different nuances in the meaning of words, tenses, etc.)  Narrative techniques (e.g., motifs, topoi, flash back, etc.)  Structure (i.e., text as a complex and multi-layered system; as a good construction that gradually builds to a big climax.) Note: Historiographical sources can also contain literariness. ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Hagiographical Literature (‘Hagiography’) • ‘Hagiography’(Gr. hagios = saint, graphein = to write) – (cf. Louth)  Term: Research invention of the 19th century  Content: Biographies of holy men and women  Purpose: Guidance of the audience to a pious lifestyle • Holiness/Sanctity (cf. Louth)  “Living holy men” vs. “dead saints” (by Claudia Rapp, cf. Peter Brown)  Intercessors: miracles before and after death  The veneration of holy persons and the cult of saints (relics) The Cult of Saints Project: http://cultofsaints.history.ox.ac.uk/?page_id=2 • Hagiographical Genres and Their Use in the Current Research (cf. Louth)  Acts of the Martyrs (Passions; Martyrdom accounts)  Saints’ Lives (various categories, cf. Louth) ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Hagiographical Literature (‘Hagiography’) Framed by Objects of Byzantine Art  Manuscript illustrations  Icons  Wall paintings  Further cult objects ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Course Outline 1. (25.02.2020): Introduction to Byzantine Literature and Art Devoted to Saints and Holy (Wo)Men • Terms and Concepts • Course Outline • Bibliographical Tools 2. (10.03.2020): Sanctity through Martyrdom: Male & Female Martyrs • The Passion of Polykarpos (BHG 1556-1560) • The Passion of Perpetua and Felicity (BHG 1482) 3. (24.03.2020): The World of the Desert: Male and Female Hermits • The Life of Antony (BHG 140) • The Life of Mary of Egypt (BHG 1042) ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Course Outline 4. (07.04.2020): The Life on Pillars and in Monasteries: Ascetics, Monks and Nuns • The Life of Daniel the Stylite, i.e., the Pillar Saint (BHG 489) • The Life of Irene of Chrysobalanton (BHG 952) 5. (21.04.2020): Secret Holiness: Cross-Dressing Nuns and Holy Fools • The Life of Mary/Marinos (no BHG no.) • The Life of Symeon Salos, i.e., the Fool (BHG 1677) 6. (05.05.2020): Imperial Sanctity: Holy Emperors and Empresses • The Life of Constantine the Great (BHG 361x) • Recapitulation 7. (19.05.2020): First Exam Meeting ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Martyrdom Scenes from the Martyrdom of Eudoxios, Romylos, Zenon and Makarios of Melitene, Metaphrastic Menologion, 11th century (cod. Add. 11870, fol. 67r, British Library, London) ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Martyrdom Jean-Léon Gérôme (1824– 1904), “The Christian Martyrs' Last Prayer”, The Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, Maryland, USA ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART The Desert Hermits Michelangelo, “The Torment of Saint Anthony” (ca. 1487–1488), Kimbell Art Museum, Texas, USA Russian icon of Saint Mary of Egypt, surrounded by scenes from her life (17th century, Beliy Gorod). ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Ascetics on Pillars and in Monasteries Daniel the Stylite, Menologion of Basil II (ca. 1000 AD) Vat. gr. 1613, fol. 237 ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Holy Fools The Entry of Saint Symeon Salos into the City of Emesa, in H. Lietzmann, Byzantinische Legenden, Jena 1911, 1, 63 ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Imperial Sanctity Helena finding the True Cross, Italian manuscript, c. 825 Mosaics in the Hagia Sophia, Emperor Constantine I with a model of the city ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Bibliographical Tools • The Bollandists (Société des Bollandistes; their name after Jean Bolland, 1596–1665): a group of scholars, who since ca. 400 years focus on hagiographical texts and the cult of saints (especially, manuscripts and editions).  Acta Sanctorum  BHG and BHG Novum  Synaxarion of Constantinople  Analecta Bollandiana ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Bibliographical Tools Acta Sanctorum (= AASS): An Anthology of Greek and Latin hagiographical texts, which were edited here for the first time and organized according to the church calendar. AASS, 1st Volume, 1643 ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Bibliographical Tools BHG and BHG Novum: Bibliotheca Hagiographica Graeca, edited by the Bollandists (e.g., François Halkin). This is a catalogue of Greek hagiographical writings, arranged alphabetically by saint. Each text or textual version has a different identification number. ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Bibliographical Tools Synaxarion of Constantinople (‘Synaxarium ecclesiae Constantinopolitanum’): It is a liturgical book (dating from the 10th century) written at imperial command (Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogennitos). It is organized according to the church calendar and contains a brief hagiographical narrative for each feast day. ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Bibliographical Tools Analecta Bollandiana – A Journal of Critical Hagiography (= AB): An authoritative academic journal dealing exclusively with hagiographical topics, edited and published since 1882 by the Société des Bollandistes in Brussels. ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Bibliographical Tools Patrologia Graeca (= PG): A collection of Greek and Latin texts, edited by Jacques Paul Migne (1800–1875); Greek texts are usually accompanied by Latin translation. ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Bibliographical Tools Bibliotheca Sanctorum (= BiblSS): It is an encyclopedia of saints containing over 30,000 lemmata on saints and biblical figures (i.e., from the Old and New Testament). It provides information on saints and their cult. Edition: Città Nuova, Rome. ©CHRISTODOULOS PAPAVARNAVAS SAINTS AND HOLY (WO)MEN IN BYZANTINE LITERATURE AND ART Bibliographical Tools The Ashgate Research Companion to Byzantine Hagiography: A two-volume work edited by Stephanos Efthymiadis. Volume one (2011) presents a chronological overview of Byzantine hagiography in the first part, and in the second part the hagiographical production of the Byzantine periphery and the Christian Orient. Volume two (2014) is divided into three sections: 1. Genres, Varieties and Forms, 2. Hagiography as Literature and 3. Hagiography and Society.