From Classical to Byzantine : social evolution in late antiquity and the fortress at Isthmia, Greece

Bibliographic Information

From Classical to Byzantine : social evolution in late antiquity and the fortress at Isthmia, Greece

P. Nick Kardulias

(BAR international series, 1412)

Archaeopress, 2005

  • : pbk

Available at  / 3 libraries

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Note

Bibliography: p. 225-240

Includes index.

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book attempts to bring an anthropological perspective to the historical archaeology of a complex period in the Greek past. Traditionally, discussion of the transition from Late Antiquity to the Early Byzantine period in the Aegean region has focused on the fate of Classical urban culture. Scholarly opinion is divided as to whether the Classical polis and its constituent institutions emerged intact from the disruptive events of the third to sixth centuries A.D. Over the past two decades a consensus has emerged that argues that the break between Classical and Byzantine occurred in the seventh, not the fourth or fifth centuries A.D., and that it was a more gradual process than previously believed. The present study examines the Byzantine Fortress at Isthmia in the Peloponnese with an eye to understanding social change in this critical period, at the level of the site and then the region, in terms of an evolutionary perspective . This study focuses on three problems at different levels of abstraction: (1) A descriptive problem; (2) A methodological problem; (3) A broader historical problem. The methodological element becomes the link between the gathering of site-specific data and the wider historical implications for that information.

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