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    <front>
        <journal-meta>
            <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
            <journal-title-group>
                <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
            </journal-title-group>
            <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
            <publisher>
                <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
            </publisher>
        </journal-meta>
        <article-meta>
            <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">21.11.31</article-id>
            <title-group>
                <article-title>21.11.31, Rossi/Sullivan (eds.), Byzantium in Eastern European Visual Culture</article-title>
            </title-group>
            <contrib-group>
                <contrib contrib-type="author">
                    <name>
                        <surname>Gerhard Jaritz</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                    <aff>Central European University</aff>
                    <address>
                        <email>jaritzg@ceu.edu</email>
                    </address>
                </contrib>
            </contrib-group>
            <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2021">
                <year>2021</year>
            </pub-date>
            <product product-type="book">
                <person-group>
                    <name>
                        <surname>Rossi, Maria Alessia and Alice Isabella Sullivan, eds</surname>
                        <given-names/>
                    </name>
                </person-group>
                <source>Byzantium in Eastern European Visual Culture in the Late Middle Ages</source>
                <year iso-8601-date="2020">2020</year>
                <publisher-loc>Leiden, Netherlands</publisher-loc>
                <publisher-name>Brill</publisher-name>
                <page-range>Pp. xvii, 302</page-range>
                <price>€116.00 / $140.00 (hardback)</price>
                <isbn>978-9-00442-136-3 (hardback)</isbn>
            </product>
            <permissions>
                <copyright-statement>Copyright 2021 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
            </permissions>
        </article-meta>
    </front>
    <body>
        <p><italic>Byzantium in Eastern European Visual Culture in the Late Middle Ages</italic> is
            based on the editors’ project “North of Byzantium: Medieval Art, Architecture, and
            Visual Culture in Eastern Europe” (<ext-link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
                xlink:href="https://www.northofbyzantium.org/"
                >https://www.northofbyzantium.org/</ext-link>) and includes papers presented at the
            2018 Byzantine Studies Conference held at San Antonio, Texas, augmented with some
            additional essays. The volume deals with “issues of cultural contact and patronage, as
            well as the transformation and appropriation of Byzantine artistic, cultural,
            theological, and political forms alongside local traditions” (4) in the Balkans, the
            Carpathians, and Russia from the end of the thirteenth to the sixteenth century. It
            offers new approaches and results, in particular, concerning research in art and
            architectural history as well as visual culture studies which is also emphasized by the
            editors in their introduction.</p>
        <p>The ten chapters of the volume contain case studies on architecture, painting,
            embroideries, and inauguration rituals. Many of them show how Byzantine tradition lived
            on after the fall of Constantinople in 1453, that is, the well-known <italic>Byzance
                après Byzance</italic> (Nicolae Iorga, 1953), which, however, has not yet been
            analyzed sufficiently with reference to art and visual culture.</p>
        <p>Justin L. Willson concentrates, in the first chapter, on the wall paintings of the
            Allegory of Wisdom in the chapel of the military tower erected by the Serbian military
            commander Stefan Chrelja Dragovol in the Bulgarian monastery of Saint John of Rila. He
            suggests a shared understanding of the allegory by the Rila painter and Philotheos
            Kokkinos, the <ext-link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
                xlink:href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ecumenical_Patriarch_of_Constantinople%22%20%5Co%20%22Ecumenical%20Patriarch%20of%20Constantinople"
                >Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople</ext-link> who wrote about Salomon’s allegory
            nearly fifty years after the fabrication of the wall painting.</p>
        <p>Alexandra Vukovich question the extext to which the inauguration of Dmitrii Ivanovich,
            the grandson of Ivan III, at the Muscovite court in 1498 was Byzantine. She shows that
            it took place as a Byzantine-style coronation ceremony, at a time of crisis at Ivan
            III’s court, “as a mask for political weakness” (58).</p>
        <p>The essay of Elias Petrou deals with Byzantine and Serbian intellectual relationship
            during the Palaiologian period. On the basis of two examples--of the construction of the
            Xenon of the Kral at Constantinople in the early fourteenth century and the relocation
            of the library of George Cantacouzenos Palaiologus to the Serbian court in the first
            half of the fifteenth century--the author is able to show particular influences of
            Serbia on Byzantine affairs </p>
        <p>Marija Mihajlovic-Shipley analyzes a panel most probably commissioned by Jelena of Anjou
            (1236-1314), wife of King Stefan Uroš I of Serbia (1243-1276), and presumably given as a
            gift to Pope Nicholas IV (r. 1288-1292). The panel kept today in the Vatican Treasury
            shows Saint Peter and Saint Paul and, in the lower register, Jelena blessed by an
            obviously Latin bishop, identified as Saint Nicholas, and two male figures on either
            side of her dressed in Byzantine type rulers‘ robes, being her sons, the Kings Dragutin
            and Milutin. The author recognizes in the panel the connection of Jelena’s Western
            upbringing and her position as Serbian queen and, more generally, a proof of the
            “ongoing dialogue between East and West and the still existing idea about the
            unification of the two Churches” (114).</p>
        <p>Early-fourteenth-century wall paintings of Christ’s miracles in Serbian churches are the
            topic of Maria Alessia Rossi’s contribution. With the help of these miracle cycles and a
            comparative approach she is able to show, on the one hand, a shared Byzantine heritage
            but, on the other hand, also specific developments and alterations. She explains the
            latter by the need of the Serbian Orthodox Church to show its independence based on the
            Slavic liturgy and its calendar.</p>
        <p>Ida Sinkević’s paper proves Byzantine- and Western-inspired influences for the
            mid-fourteenth-century church of the monastery of Dečani in today’s Kosovo. She analyzes
            “bilingual aspects” (161) and shows that Byzantine andWestern traditions are
            recognizable in the architecture as well as in the interior and exterior decoration of
            the church. She accounts for it the Serbian King Stefan Uroš III Dečanski who founded
            the church and was known for his openness to the West as well as the fact that Catholics
            lived also in the area and merchants and travelers passed it regularly. The author also
            sees the church with its fusions as giving rise to a local Serbian style.</p>
        <p>Continuities of triconch churches, characteristic for the Middle Byzantine period, in
            Orthodox church architecture of Serbia and Wallachia are analyzed in Jelena Bogdanović’s
            paper. Being founded or sponsored by members of the Serbian and Wallachian nobility,
            they were built from mid-fourteenth to mid-sixteenth century, most of them at a time
            when these areas were already under Ottoman control. The author recognizes Mount Athos,
            a center of Orthodox Christianity, with its triconch domed churches as the most
            influential paradigm for the Serbian and Wallachian circumstances .</p>
        <p>Late medieval church architecture in Moldavia represents a synthesis of Western,
            Byzantine, and local elements which is analyzed in Alice Isabella Sullivan’s
            contribution to the volume. She concentrates on churches of the fifteenth and sixteenth
            century and recognizes, among others, the main Byzantine influences in the layout of the
            churches and the decoration with image cycles, Gothic elements in the buttresses,
            windows and door frames as well as local character in the proportions of the triconch
            plan. In the period after Constantinople’s fall, the Byzantine influences still
            persisted dominant.</p>
        <p>Henry David Schilb engages in a comparative study on post-Byzantine church embroidery in
            Wallachia and Moldavia, based on the general statement that Wallachia’s visual culture
            showed stronger connections to developments in the Balkans while Moldavia seems to have
            had stronger connections to the actual Byzantine cultural sphere. With the help of the
            comparative analysis of a number of surviving, fourteenth- to sixteenth century, pieces
            he is able to show differences in the Wallachian and Moldavian transformations of the
            Byzantine tradition.</p>
        <p>The last chapter by Danijel Ciković and Iva Jazbec Tomaić engages in the comprehensive
            analysis of a valuable, fourteenth-century, Venetian textile out of the workshop of
            Paolo Veneziano and kept today at the London Victoria and Albert Museum: the so-called
            Veglia Altar Frontal made in Venice for the cathedral of Veglia (Krk) in present-day
            Croatia, depicting the Crowning of the Virgin with the donor and surrounded by male
            saints important for the region. The piece can be seen as the most prestigious of a
            number of altar frontals produced in the fourteenth century by Venetian embroidery
            workshops for churches at the eastern Adriatic coast. The authors are able to confirm
            the production date of c. 1358, to identify the donor as Bishop Ivan II of Krk. and to
            integrate the altar frontal into the political, social, and network circumstances of the
            period.</p>
        <p>Altogether, the ten case studies represent well-researched examples of late medieval and
            early modern visual culture in the Balkans, the Carpathians, and Russia. They may serve
            as basis for providing more general insights into respective networks, relations,
            interconnectedness, influenes, and their patterns. At the moment, it seems to have been
            too early to offer such as a summary of the volume. One should expect them as the final
            product of the editors’ project.</p>
    </body>
</article>
