The Hypotyposis of the Monastery of the Theotokos Evergetis, Constantinople (11th–12th Centuries): Introduction, Translation and Commentary

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Ashgate Publishing, Ltd., 28 июл. 2013 г. - Всего страниц: 330

This book forms part of the Evergetis Project which aims to investigate all surviving texts associated with the Monastery of the Theotokos Evergetis founded in 1049 near Constantinople. A book-length introduction sets out the historical significance of the house for the development of Byzantine monasticism and discusses its administration, liturgy and way of life.

An English translation of the Hypotyposis (the monastery's foundation document) is provided, accompanied by detailed notes. Previous scholarship on the authorship of the Hypotyposis and the evolution of the text is discussed and linguistic analysis used to suggest that traces of the original foundation document by Paul Evergetinos can be identified within it. The Hypotyposis was widely used as a model for later Byzantine and Slavonic typika and the precise relationship of these documents one to the other is demonstrated in detail.

The volume also includes prosopographical material on the known patrons of the monastery, a discussion of its library, English translations of later Greek and Latin texts referring to the monastery and a suggested reconstruction of Paul Evergetinos' original foundation document.

 

Содержание

History
1
History of the Evergetis Monastery
9
The Evergetis and Byzantine Monasticism in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries
17
Administration and Life
33
Monastic Officers at the Evergetis
41
Status and Possessions of the Evergetis
49
Liturgical Practice at the Evergetis
53
Fasts Feasts and Commemorations at the Evergetis
63
An Earlier Structure
120
A Pauline Hypotyposis?
127
The Influence of the Evergetis Hypotyposis
136
Exposition and hypotyposis for the life of the monks in the monastery of the most holy Theotokos Evergetis handed down by Timothy the monk an...
147
The Typikon of Paul Evergetinos A Reconstruction
217
The Hypotyposis and later typika Influential Chapters
241
The Books at Evergetis A Reconstruction
243
The Identity of the Monk kyr Anthony
253

Reading and Books at the Evergetis
70
An Evergetis Scriptorium
80
Text
83
Codex Atheniensis graecus 788
89
The Final Additions
93
Insertions in the Hypotyposis
96
Chapters and their Titles
117
The Patrons Promotenos and Kataphloron
257
Later Documents Concerning the Evergetis
261
Glossary of Monastic Terms
281
Bibliography
287
Index
301
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Until his retirement, R.H. Jordan was Assistant Director of the Institute of Byzantine Studies at the Queen's University of Befast, UK. Rosemary Morris taught at the University of Manchester from 1974 to 2003, and is now Visiting Fellow at the University of York, UK.

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