Home Neue mittel- und spätbyzantinische Inschriften aus Bithynien
Article
Licensed
Unlicensed Requires Authentication

Neue mittel- und spätbyzantinische Inschriften aus Bithynien

  • Mustafa Adak and Paweł Nowakowski
Published/Copyright: April 22, 2021
Become an author with De Gruyter Brill

Abstract

The article presents a collection of seventeen previously unpublished inscriptions on stone and small objects from Bithynia. The majority of them belong to the middle Byzantine period and comes from the area of Nikaia and Nikomedeia. First of all, the inscription from a boundary stone of a monastery of Theotokos near Niketiaton is discussed, in which the bridge of a certain Eustathios and the monastery of Johannes Kranbas are mentioned. The building inscription of a refectory attests to the existence of a splendid monastic complex near Kanlıçay, to the east of the Sangarios River. The inscription from a column offered by Leon lists several saints. In addition to clerics and monks, the funerary inscriptions also mention one Basil who came from the Diocese of Ikonion. This is followed by an epigraphical attestation of the koinonikon σῶμα Χριστοῦ (an Easter hymn), a fragment of an inscription mentioning the city of Joannina, a reliquary cross of Saint Damian, and two processional or blessing crosses. A clay seal with the monogram probably of a certain Photios closes the collection.

Published Online: 2021-04-22
Published in Print: 2021-02-01

© 2021 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston

Articles in the same Issue

  1. Titelei
  2. Inhalt
  3. Siglenverzeichnis
  4. I. ABTEILUNG
  5. Neue mittel- und spätbyzantinische Inschriften aus Bithynien
  6. Icons as punishers. Two narrations from the Vaticanus gr. 1587 manuscript (BHG 1390 f)
  7. Rituali di corte. Il Triclinio dei XIX Letti del Grande Palazzo di Costantinopoli
  8. Fragments of a steatite icon (diptych wing) with the Great Feasts cycle excavated in Chełm (eastern Poland)
  9. The philosophy of Constantine the Philosopher of Nicaea
  10. Ist Andronikos Synadenos um die Mitte des 12. Jahrhunderts in normannische Gefangenschaft geraten?
  11. Revisiting the church of Saint Spyridon in Selymbria
  12. A tale of two skeletons?
  13. The portrayal of Syrgiannes Palaiologos Philanthropenos in the historical works of Nikephoros Gregoras and John Kantakouzenos
  14. Byzantine influence on Nubian painting: the loroi and the gender of the Archangels
  15. On earth as it is in heaven? Reinterpreting the Heavenly Liturgy in Byzantine art
  16. Prontuario para una abadesa: El Escur. Φ III 11 e Irene Cumno (con una propuesta de la escritura inédita de Mateo Blastares)
  17. Composing the Μικρομεγάλη Ἰλιάς
  18. From Baghdad to Antioch and Constantinople: Ibn Buṭlān and the Byzantines
  19. The liturgy as a source of the epigraphic formulary: some examples from the late antique Peloponnese
  20. II. ABTEILUNG
  21. Zofia A. Brzozowska / Mirosław J. Leszka / Kirił Marinow/ Teresa Wolińska (eds.). Widmo Mahometa, cień Samuela. Cesarstwo bizantyńskie w relacji zprzedstawicielami innych religii i kultur (VII–XV wiek)
  22. Dorotei Getov. A catalogue of the Greek manuscripts in the National Library “Sts. Cyril and Methodius”, Sofia
  23. David Holton / Geoffrey Horrocks / Marjolijne Janssen / Tina Lendari / Io Manolessou / Notis Toufexis. The Cambridge Grammar of Medieval and Early Modern Greek
  24. Mirosław J. Leszka / Kirił Marinow (eds.). The Bulgarian State in 927–969. The Epoch of Tsar Peter I.
  25. Marina Loukaki. Les Grâces à Athènes: éloge dʼun gouverneur byzantin par Nikolaos Kataphlôron
  26. Ruth Macrides / Joseph A. Munitiz/ Dimiter Angelov. Pseudo-Kodinos and the Constantinopolitan court: offices and ceremonies
  27. Marina Molin Pradel / Kerstin Hajdú. Katalog der griechischen Handschriften der Bayerischen Staatsbibliothek München. Band 5. Codices graeci Monacenses 266–347
  28. András Németh. The Excerpta Constantiniana and the Byzantine appropriation of the past
  29. Gaga Shurgaia. Vaxt’ang I Gorgasali re di Kartli. Alle origini dell’autocefalia della Chiesa ortodossa di Georgia
  30. Nachrichten
  31. Totentafel
  32. Nachruf - Klaus-Peter Matschke (14. 5. 1938 – 5. 9. 2020)
  33. Tafelanhang
Downloaded on 5.9.2025 from https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.1515/bz-2021-9002/html
Scroll to top button