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Romanland: Ethnicity and Empire in Byzantium

Full title: Romanland: Ethnicity and Empire in Byzantium
ISBN: 9780674986510
ISBN 10: 0674986512
Authors: Kaldellis, Anthony
Publisher: Belknap Press: An Imprint of Harvard University Press
Edition: 1
Num. pages: 392
Binding: Hardcover
Language: en
Published on: 2019

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Synopsis

Was There Ever Such A Thing As The Byzantine Empire And Who Were Those Self-professed Romans We Choose To Call Byzantine Today? At The Heart Of These Two Interlinked Questions Is Anthony Kaldellis's Assertion That Empires Are, By Definition, Multiethnic. If There Was Indeed Such A Thing As The Byzantine Empire, Which Rules Bounded Majority And Minority Ethnic Groups? The Labels For The Minority Groups In Byzantium Are Clear - Slavs, Bulgarians, Armenians, Jews, Muslims. What Was The Ethnicity Of The Majority Group? Historical Evidence Tells Us Unequivocally That No Card-carrying Byzantine Ever Called Himself Byzantine. He Would Identify As Roman. This Line Of Identification Was So Strong In The Eastern Empire That Even The Conquering Ottomans Saw Themselves As Inheritors Of The Roman Empire. In Western Scholarship, However, There Has Been A Long Tradition Of Denying Romanness To Byzantium. In The Middle Ages, People Of The Eastern Empire Were Made Greeks, And By The Nineteenth Century They Were Shorn Of Their Distorted Greekness And Turned Byzantine. In Romanland, Kaldellis Argues That It Is Time For Historians To Take The Romanness Of Byzantines Seriously So That We Can Better Understand The Relations Between Romans And Non-romans, As Well As The Processes Of Assimilation That Led To The Absorption Of Foreign Groups Into The Roman Genos.-- Part I. Romans: A History Of Denial -- Roman Ethnicity -- Romanland -- Part Ii. Others: Ethnic Assimilation -- The Armenian Fallacy -- Was Byzantium An Empire In The Tenth Century? -- The Apogee Of Empire In The Eleventh Century. Anthony Kaldellis. Includes Bibliographical References And Index.