Despite the
snow and the transport problems, the annual lecture in honor of
the great scholar of Byzantium, Steven Runciman, was held as
scheduled at King's College in London on Thursday. In the
university amphitheater, after vespers in the chapel, Professor
Judith Herrin of Princeton and King's College delivered the 18th
Runciman Lecture on the subject «We Are All Children of
Byzantium.»
The lecture
coincided with the Byzantium 330-1453 exhibition which is being
hosted by the Royal Academy in London. Below is an abridged
version of Professor Herrin's lecture.
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Tonight my aim
is to celebrate Byzantium and its great civilization. My title
has been chosen to follow in the well-laid paths of allegory -
and initially I did not intend to suggest that «we» are in any
biological way «children» of Byzantium. But in fact, many in
this audience really will be descendants of Byzantine families,
who can trace their genealogies back to the dynasties of
Palaiologos, Komnenos or Laskaris. In addition, many
contemporary Greek names reflect Byzantine origins: Xylis,
Dragazis, Kedros or Lemos, others are identified as descendants
by an addition to their names, the Costopouloi, Dimopouloi and
Stathakopouloi, and yet others declare their proud ancestry in
the Levant/Levent.
And together
with these natural descendants, an even larger number might be
adopted or spiritual children. Spiritual kinship, a prominent
feature of many societies, ancient, medieval and modern, was
widely practised in Byzantium as well as Islam and the medieval
West. Children were regularly sponsored by godparents, linked to
a particular teacher by a tradition of learning, to a master by
service, or were simply adopted by other families.
In a lecture
named after Steven Runciman it might be appropriate to suggest
that he was a child of Byzantium by adoption. He adopted the
identity of Byzantinist as a sort of self-definition, and many
of us are proud to follow in his footsteps. On such an occasion,
it hardly seems necessary to repeat our great debt to Steven,
but this is an opportunity to thank our patron, Nicholas Egon,
who set up an annual lecture in his name while Steven was still
alive. Many will recall the times he sat in the front row and
enjoyed the lectures by my distinguished predecessors and asked
a penetrating question. This evening I would like to draw
attention to one of Runciman's less well-known dictums - «I
often wonder if it was the strength of Byzantine women that kept
the empire going for so long.»
Thanks to the
efforts of many scholars the epithets traditionally associated
with Byzantium are being rolled back; the bad old stereotypes
are being countered by substantive demonstrations of what the
empire achieved in its millennial history, and what that means
for us today… It's now possible to stress that from its
inception the newly Christianized empire of Rome in the East
Mediterranean was in contact with a vast range of other forces,
initially Persian, Turkic, even Chinese, and later Islam, pagan
Russia, the Slavs, Vikings and Jewish communities among others.
These contacts were military, diplomatic, theological and
sometimes involved intellectual debate. Not only did Byzantium
define its character and role in relation to this wider world,
but it also influenced even distant countries in the process.
Its ancient Greek heritage as well as the formative Eastern,
Roman and Christian features all played a part in the shaping of
Europe, the Balkans and the medieval Mediterranean world.
Model for
empires
Sometimes we
may only find these influences at second hand, for instance, in
the coronation ritual of European monarchs or the adaptation of
Roman law to serve a medieval Christian society. But its
examples still echo, for instance in a proud monarchy that was
also linked to a most unusual cosmopolitanism. In this
particular association, Byzantium set a model for most
subsequent empires (the Hapsburg, Ottoman, Austro-Hungarian and
Russian). These were, in the main, true children and descendants
of Byzantium. And today, a similar model of acceptance and
toleration of difference may be cited as a guiding principle for
contemporary metropoleis, like our own London.
In terms of
imperial philanthropy, patronage of the arts, diplomacy and
military tactics, Byzantine practice informed and helped to form
its neighbors. And in the context of preserving and transmitting
ancient wisdom with detailed commentary and explanation,
Byzantine scholars excelled in many fields: medical,
astronomical, historical and literary. Without making an
excessive claim for the Byzantine contribution to world
civilization, if we look at it more closely, we can see that
Byzantium also continues to be our cousin
In this
process of recognizing Byzantium as an integral part of our
world, rather than the dead zone between us and the Greco-Roman
world as Voltaire and Gibbon perceived it, many benefactors have
helped - particularly in the mounting of great exhibitions - the
recent ones in New York and London, supported by the J.F.
Costopoulos, A.G. Leventis and the Stavros Niarchos foundations.
In addition to whatever else they do, these major shows have
attracted large crowds to admire the artistic products of
Byzantium, and this wider appreciation is another factor in
ending the received stereotypes. So building on that greater
awareness, I would like to look at specific issues, individuals
and objects, which help us to celebrate the many «children of
Byzantium.» Recently, this term was also used by a politician -
I will tell you which one at the end of my lecture. But now I
propose that we all imagine ourselves «children of Byzantium»
for the next 45 minutes or so, while I use the epithet to trace
out some of the less obvious ways in which Byzantium continues
to have an impact on us today.
Systematic
endogamy
Young princes
and princesses were regularly employed in political alliances.
Sons, normally crowned as co-emperor by their fathers at a
tender age, were often married to foreign princesses who arrived
in Constantinople to be trained in Byzantine customs. Daughters
had a harder role, because they might be sent abroad to
reinforce peace treaties with the empire's enemies. In
anthropological terms, Byzantine rulers practiced a systematic
exogamy, marrying out, moderated by endogamy, when partners were
chosen from among imperial subjects. But it was a gendered form
of exogamy where females did all the moving, whether they were
imperial princesses going out or outsiders coming in. This
should remind us that women are bearers of meaning; they change
their names at marriage, and carry their natal cultures from one
social group to another. In the case of outgoing princesses,
this responsibility was very strong; for incoming brides,
however, acquiring Byzantine traditions was the more pressing
need.
Yet imperial
children, girls and boys, had no choice in the matter: Their
marriages were arranged with a view to consolidating imperial
policy, as were the marriages of most children of medieval
rulers. The tradition was inherited from Rome and had become
more developed as non-Roman forces pressed into the empire in
the West during the 5th century AD. Political alliances,
reinforced by marriage, became a more common way of trying to
sustain foreign relations without constant fighting. In
Byzantium, as dynastic monarchy became stronger, it was
symbolized in the purple chamber, constructed to guarantee the
legitimacy of imperial offspring, a notion that no other empire
was able to emulate. The principle of «sacrificing» a high-born
or imperial young woman to the wishes of a non-Roman ruler was
clearly appreciated by the outsiders. But also perhaps by those
women locked within the imperial system.
Let's start in
the 5th century with the case of Galla Placidia, daughter of
Emperor Theodosius I. After the sack of Rome in 410, when she
was aged between 17 and 22, she was carried off as a prisoner by
Athaulf, the Gothic leader. He took her to Gaul where in 414
they celebrated their marriage in great style and later she gave
birth to their son, who was named Theodosius after his Roman
grandfather. To their sorrow he died early in 415 and Athaulf
was murdered. Galla was brought back to Rome as part of a new
treaty concluded between Visigoths and Romans. In 417 she was
married to a Roman general Constantius, and they had two
children: Honoria and Valentinian. And then Constantius died.
Having
experienced the loss of her two husbands, Galla seems to have
determined to take her fate into her own hands. She must have
played a part in her 5-year-old son's promotion to Caesar in 424
and assumed a major role as regent and mother of the future
emperor of the West. For the next 25 years she dominated the
imperial court at Ravenna, promoting the orthodox Christian cult
through new churches designed to rival the Arian Christian
monuments. Galla Placidia died at Rome in November 450 and was
probably buried there. What is called her mausoleum at Ravenna
was probably an oratory dedicated to St Lawrence. She
exemplified a pattern of female authority that was to have a
long life in Byzantium. It may also have inspired her own
daughter, Honoria.
When Honoria
was about 8 years old she was appointed empress. This was highly
unusual. She therefore grew up as a woman accorded the highest
authority in the Roman world and coins were struck in her honor.
Instead of marrying, however, she lived in her own palace in
Ravenna and began to plot against her brother Valentinian III
with her steward Eugenius. When their schemes were discovered,
Eugenius was killed and Honoria was exiled and forcibly
betrothed to a wealthy senator. She then conceived a daring plan
to avoid marrying him by calling on none other than Attila the
Hun, to rescue her. She was able to do this by sending her
trusted eunuch servant Hycinthus to the dreaded enemy of Rome
with gold and, more important, her own ring. Attila interpreted
the message as a declaration of her desire to marry him and
quickly took up her cause - he demanded that Theodosius grant
him «his bride» and half the western territories ruled by
Valentinian (as her dowry) - and then set out to make good his
claim. Curiously, in Constantinople this outrageous demand was
considered more sympathetically than in Rome, where Valentinian
was horrified.
And the threat
was real enough; in 451 and again in 452, Attila advanced
against the West, to rescue Honoria and take over Gaul, the part
of the empire which he coveted. On both occasions he was held
off. Only his unexpected death in 453 released the Roman world
from the Hunnic threat. While this story is well known, there is
another tantalizing possibility. Could it be the case that when
Attila was held hostage in the Roman court he may have seen the
young Honoria, who also spent a short time in the eastern
capital with her mother Galla Placidia in 423? As a 12-year-old,
Attila arrived in Byzantium in 418 as a guarantee for his
uncle's good behavior. Huns were frequent visitors to the
imperial court… In 423 he would have been about 17 years old,
while Honoria was 5. Did she notice him? Did Attila see the
young princess from Ravenna? We can imagine this wonderful
moment, which may have occurred: two parties of hostages, Huns
and imperial women from the West with Gothic connections - they
could have met. They had both shared the «gilded cage» as
unwilling guests of the imperial court, exposed to the same
Byzantine traditions. If true, this would have given Honoria an
additional reason for appealing to Attila 25 years later, as one
royal hostage to another!
I have dwelt
on these two well-known examples because they typify the
Byzantine attitude to imperial children: The notion that princes
and princesses could strengthen alliances, induce warmer
relations with aggressive barbarian leaders and bring them into
the civilizing fold of Byzantine influence continued till the
very end of the eastern empire. It was realized in 731 when Leo
III betrothed his son to the daughter of the Khazar leader,
attempted several times in the late eighth and ninth centuries
and successfully negotiated in 927. After making peace with the
Bulgarians, Romanos I sent his granddaughter Maria to marry Tsar
Symeon's son, Peter, in a union designed to secure the political
alliance. Maria, who was renamed Peace in honor of the union,
seems to have established a pro-Byzantine faction in Bulgaria
which was not appreciated by Symeon's other sons, but it
persuaded Peter to remain an ally of her grandfather and his
successor Constantine VII. She kept in touch with her natal
family, making visits back to Constantinople until her death in
about 963.
'Invented
tradition'
Although the
policy appeared to have worked, Emperor Constantine VII later
denounced his father-in-law for sending Maria off to Bulgaria,
using the specious argument that Byzantine princesses should
never be married to barbarians. Only the Franks in western lands
might be permitted this privilege, because Constantine the Great
had come from those parts. In 944 Romanos I had married his
grandson to another western bride, Bertha, daughter of King Hugo
of Provence. When he condemned the Bulgarian marriage but
praised the Frankish one, Constantine was confirming an «invented
tradition» that involved his own son.
The
outstanding example of these unions is Theophano, niece of John
I Tzimiskes. For several years the German emperor Otto I had
wanted an imperial princess, born in the purple, for his son and
heir, and sent Liutprand of Cremona to negotiate such a union,
without success. But after a change of emperor, Theophano was
finally dispatched to the West in 971. Some commentators noted
that she was not a porphyrogennetos, a child born in the purple,
but merely the niece of John I. They all, however, described the
magnificent gifts she brought with her, and observed her
numerous attendants and gifts with curiosity. She is the key
instance of a pro-Byzantine plant in Western Europe through her
marriage in 972 to Otto II, which was also recorded on an
imitation Byzantine charter. She bore Otto three daughters and
finally a son Otto III. The half-Byzantine prince received Greek
education and displayed himself in imperial style. Theophano
tried to arrange a Byzantine bride for him, and after her death
negotiations were successfully concluded. The emperor's
daughter, Zoe, was selected to perform the role. But in 1002
just as Zoe landed at Bari, Otto III died, so she had to turn
around and go back to Byzantium where she then had a brilliant
career. As a true born in the purple princess, she married three
times and raised another man to the position of emperor, but to
her sadness she never became a mother. This brought the
Macedonian dynasty to an end.
Theophano,
meanwhile, exercised considerable power in the medieval West,
signing charters for her young son while she was regent, and on
one occasion even adopting the masculine form of emperor,
imperator, rather than the feminine. But two generations or so
later, when most people would have retained only a slight memory
of her ecclesiastical foundations and patronage, she gained
notoriety from the condemnations of clerics like St Peter Damian,
and this indicates why such aristocratic ladies from Byzantium
were not appreciated in the West. They criticized Theophano for
introducing diaphanous silk dresses, which they considered
indecent, and extravagant jewelry (which made western women
jealous), and for taking endless baths and washing, which they
considered unnecessary.
Peter Damian
also associated her with another Byzantine princess, Maria
Argyropoulaina who married the son of the Doge of Venice in
1004. He complained that she used eunuchs to cut up her food,
and then ate with a little two-pronged gold fork; insisted on
washing in rainwater, and burnt many sweet smelling herbs in her
rooms in Venice. Finally, he prophesied that Maria would end up
in hell for such indecent and wicked actions. Later we shall see
how this marriage formed a link in the ongoing connections
between Constantinople and Venice.
These children
of Byzantium, who impressed their husbands and appear to have
performed an ambassadorial role to great effect, also upset
celibate clergy in the Western church - an early example perhaps
of people in the West projecting onto Byzantium the anxieties of
their own society.
Different
problems were faced by other princesses sent to newly
evangelized territories of Bulgaria or to pagan Russia, e.g.
Anna, sister of Basil II, who had the harder task since her
husband Vladimir was hardly Christian and had developed a clear
military rivalry with Byzantium. But since she represented the
faith that the Russians were obliged to accept in order for the
marriage to go ahead, she could at least act as a patron of
Orthodoxy. Anna founded churches and monasteries to spread the
new faith. And the founding saints of the Russian Church, Boris
and Gleb, are sometimes traced back to Vladimir and Anna.
During the
11th century this tradition of out-marriage fell into disuse not
because of a change of Byzantine policy but because Basil and
Constantine failed to marry the three purple-born princesses of
the Macedonian dynasty. Other generals from leading families
took over power until Alexios Komnenos established his authority.
At his accession, the Byzantine family hierarchy was re-established
with a vengeance and continued through five generations. Despite
Constantine VII's advice, an increasing number of western brides
were sought for imperial princes. And in the 13th to 15th
centuries, Byzantine princesses were even more frequently sent
abroad to sustain alliances with the foreign powers that now
encircled the capital.
'Family of
kings'
One
consequence of this marriage policy was the creation of a
«family of kings» based in Constantinople, where emperors
devised a virtual system of relatives with titles and ranks to
form a hierarchy of precedence. At the time of the conversion of
the Bulgar Khan Boris, emperor Michael III performed the role of
godfather and gave the newly Christian ruler his own name, a
clear example of spiritual adoption. This connection also
implied a father to son relationship between the two rulers
although it did not prevent serious challenges to Byzantine
influence in Bulgaria under Boris-Michael's son Symeon.
Nonetheless,
the conversion of the Bulgars, their closer relationship to the
empire and the patriarch of Constantinople, and the marriage of
Maria to Tsar Peter helped to prevent further outbreaks of war.
Such informal family relations were not always understood, and
many foreigners felt themselves slighted (and their masters
insulted) when they were not seated close to the emperor's table
at state banquets. In 963, when Liutprand, ambassador from the
western emperor Otto I, realized that the Bulgarians were given
places of honor, he felt this as a direct snub and complained.
But according to the principle of «the family of kings,» the
«barbarians» who represented the Bulgarian Tsar, that is the
emperor's «brother» naturally took precedence over the envoy of
the German ruler.
As in real
families, the various «children» of the «father» often
quarrelled over their honorary titles and costumes, possessions
and access to the head of the family. But the emperor attempted
to sweeten their differences in a fatherly fashion. He also
demanded that his relatives abroad send their own young children
to the Byzantine capital as hostages for good behavior. This was
a typical Roman ploy to secure military negotiations: After a
victory, the defeated enemy was obliged to let the emperor take
his young sons and even daughters off to Constantinople. We have
already seen how this may have affected Attila the Hun, back in
the early fifth century, and an even more striking instance is
the Ostrogoth, Theoderic, who spent almost a decade in
Constantinople during the 460s, as a guarantee of his father's
loyalty. In numerous cases, the result was a very curious mix of
influence and resentment.
In this way,
some filial respect was induced among the barbarians - Symeon,
grandson of Boris/Michael acquired such a deep knowledge of
Greek that he was called half a Hellene, though this didn't
prevent him from challenging Byzantium and claiming the title
basileus. Later in the 11th century the young Georgian princess
Marta/Maria was sent to Constantinople as a hostage for the good
behavior of her father. The imperial court must have had special
facilities for these foreigners who had to be looked after and
attended the court on every ceremonial occasion. I think we have
to imagine classes for a mixture of children: Education in Greek
language, Roman history, verses of Homer, military tactics and
all the other aspects of medieval culture, taught by court
eunuchs whose loyalty to imperial ideology was beyond question.
Finally, who
also said we are all children of Byzantium?
In November
2004, in connection with Turkey's application to join the EU,
Jacques Chirac addressed a student conference in Marseille, the
day after a large demonstration against Turkish membership. His
use of the phrase is interesting on many counts, not least the
fact that some Turks are indeed also claiming to be children of
Byzantium: They emphasize how firmly the Ottomans maintained
imperial traditions into the modern era, preserved Byzantine
chancellery habits, tax-keeping methods, and continued the
multicultural and polyglot culture of Byzantium. This is claimed
in the spirit of inclusivity and cousinhood, not of bickering
and competition.
So in addition
to the Balkan countries, and states emerging from the Russian
and Soviet empires, Georgia and Armenia (distinctly different
but orthodox), Syria and Lebanon with their ancient Christian
communities, other groups such as the Copts in Egypt, can also
claim to be children of Byzantium. In this larger family, Greece
is our elder brother and sister. But it is also part of a wider
group of siblings that is just beginning to be discovered. By
drawing attention to the real, symbolic and imagined children of
Byzantium, I think we can expand and enrich our sense of that
great civilization