IMC 2017: Sessions
Session 1309: Skint: Peasants and Poverty in Byzantium, IV
Wednesday 5 July 2017, 16.30-18.00
Organisers: | Anna C. Kelley, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology, University of Birmingham Flavia Vanni, Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman & Modern Greek Studies, Department of Classics, Ancient History & Archaeology, University of Birmingham |
---|---|
Moderator/Chair: | Francesca Dell'Acqua, Dipartimento di Scienze del Patrimonio Culturale, Università degli Studi di Salerno |
Paper 1309-a | Protest and Popular Uprising in the 11th-Century Byzantine Chronicles (Language: English) Index terms: Byzantine Studies, Historiography - Medieval, Social History |
Paper 1309-b | The Reactions of the (Relatively) Poor to the Domestic Art of the Elite (Language: English) Index terms: Art History - General, Byzantine Studies, Daily Life, Social History |
Paper 1309-c | Who Ate All the Pepper?: Definitions and Concepts of 'Elite' and 'Non-Elite' Consumption in the Early Medieval Mediterranean (Language: English) Index terms: Byzantine Studies, Daily Life, Economics - General, Social History |
Abstract | Byzantium as a political and cultural entity is one largely observed through the eyes and agency of its imperial and clerical elite. As the authors and commissioners of most of the documented sources that survive, the history of the Byzantine world of the 4th to 15th centuries, is essentially their history. Yet, such individuals and groups comprised only a fraction of the population living within the empire's borders. Harder to deduce are the roles and lives of its demographic majority: non-elites and the poor. Such groups are largely ignored in the written sources and therefore hold a diminished position in contemporary the scholarship. These sessions seek to remedy this issue. Scholars continue to develop new approaches for examining the daily interactions and activities of non-elite populations, including the peasantry, urban labourers and the destitute. Equally fundamental are questions about how the poor were conceptualised and controlled by the primary custodians of wealth and power. Through a synthesis of archaeological, textual and art historical remains this panel aims to explore a more dynamic understanding of poverty and the peasant condition within the pre-modern eastern Mediterranean. |