PALLADINO, Adrien. Beyond Nations and Empires : The ‘Byzantine Commonwealth’ and Russian Émigré Scholarship. In 6th Day of Byzantine Studies, 1.11.2019, Brno. 2019.
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Basic information
Original name Beyond Nations and Empires : The ‘Byzantine Commonwealth’ and Russian Émigré Scholarship
Authors PALLADINO, Adrien (250 France, guarantor, belonging to the institution).
Edition 6th Day of Byzantine Studies, 1.11.2019, Brno, 2019.
Other information
Original language English
Type of outcome Presentations at conferences
Field of Study 60401 Arts, Art history
Country of publisher Czech Republic
Confidentiality degree is not subject to a state or trade secret
WWW URL
RIV identification code RIV/00216224:14210/19:00107752
Organization unit Faculty of Arts
Keywords in English Historiography; Byzantine Studies; Dimitri Obolensky; André Grabar; national narratives; commonwealth; interwar period; nationalism; Cold War; colonialism
Tags rivok
Changed by Changed by: prof. Mgr. Ondřej Jakubec, Ph.D., učo 108186. Changed: 20/4/2020 20:15.
Abstract
The notion of “Byzantine Commonwealth” was coined in 1971 by Dimitri Obolensky (1918–2001), a Russian émigré almost entirely educated in Great Britain. However, the idea of an overarching cultural “influence” exerted by the Eastern Roman empire on a variety of countries which had formed parts of the Russian empire and extended to encompass the lands which – until 1991 and the fall of the Soviet Union – had been united in an economic and political block, possesses deeper roots. Furthermore, the very roots of thinking about a Byzantine “Commonwealth” have been transformed by the individual trajectories of scholars, especially those who emigrated after 1917. In the frame of this presentation, I would firstly like to present the idea – or myth – of Byzantine Commonwealth. Starting with Obolensky, I would like to further analyse the ideas behind the notion. The latter must be linked with the reworking of Russia’s “Byzantine heritage” by Russian scholars in dialogue with the “West”. Secondly, special focus will be given to the notion of Byzantium’s artistic “influence” by extending the discourse to another Russian émigré scholar, André Grabar (1896–1990). Especially his early works – written while in emigration in Bulgaria or shortly after in France on Bulgarian materials – were instrumental in the creation of the idea of the local “artistic dialects” rather than separate languages spoken by the different areas of Byzantine influence beyond its formal borders. Both figures here analysed, stemming from two different generations, are ideal to exemplify the transformation of the idea of Byzantium from an imperial (and for some “totalitarian”) state to a utopic supranational entity from the years 1917 to 1971.
Links
GA18-20666S, research and development projectName: Kondakovovo dědictví, Byzance a emigrace (André Grabar a Seminarium Kondakovianum) (Acronym: HNK)
Investor: Czech Science Foundation
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