美好年代或危机(1025-1118 年)

M. Angold
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引用次数: 5

摘要

11世纪的巴西尔二世在位近50年后,于1025年12月去世。他让拜占庭成为巴尔干半岛和中东地区的主导力量,在多瑙河沿岸、亚美尼亚高地和幼发拉底河以外拥有明显安全的边界。五十年后,拜占庭为生存而挣扎。它所有的边界都被攻破了。土耳其游牧民族在安纳托利亚的中心地带定居;多瑙河沿岸的行省被另一个游牧民族佩切涅格人占领;而它在意大利南部的桥头堡则被诺曼冒险者洗劫一空。这是一次惊人的命运逆转。同样令人惊讶的是,拜占庭帝国在阿历克修斯一世(1081-1118)治下的复兴。这是一个政治动荡、金融危机和社会动荡的年代,但也是一个文化和智力创新和成就的时代。位于希俄斯岛的尼亚莫尼修道院教堂、德尔斐附近的霍西奥斯卢卡斯修道院教堂和雅典郊区的达弗尼修道院教堂都是在这一时期建造和装饰的。它们提供了11世纪在君士坦丁堡建造的宏伟纪念碑的一丝光芒,这些纪念碑没有幸存下来:比如Peribleptos和Mangana的圣乔治。1066年《西奥多·诗篇》的微缩版不仅制作精美,还提醒人们,11世纪君士坦丁堡经历了一场强大的修道运动。这平衡了人们对古典教育日益增长的兴趣,但并不一定与之矛盾。领军人物是迈克尔·普塞洛斯。
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Belle Époque or crisis? (1025–1118)
the eleventh-century question Basil II died in December 1025 after a reign of almost fifty years. He left Byzantium the dominant power of the Balkans and Middle East, with apparently secure frontiers along the Danube, in the Armenian highlands and beyond the Euphrates. Fifty years later Byzantium was struggling for its existence. All its frontiers were breached. Its Anatolian heartland was being settled by Turkish nomads; its Danubian provinces were occupied by another nomad people, the Pechenegs; while its southern Italian bridgehead was swept away by Norman adventurers. It was an astonishing reversal of fortunes. Almost as astonishing was the recovery that the Byzantine empire then made under Alexios I Komnenos (1081–1118). These were years of political turmoil, financial crisis and social upheaval, but it was also a time of cultural and intellectual innovation and achievement. The monastery churches of Nea Moni, on the island of Chios, of Hosios Loukas, near Delphi, and of Daphni, on the outskirts of Athens, were built and decorated in this period. They provide a glimmer of grander monuments built in Constantinople in the eleventh century, which have not survived: such as the Peribleptos and St George of the Mangana. The miniatures of the Theodore Psalter of 1066 are not only beautifully executed but are also a reminder that eleventh-century Constantinople saw a powerful movement for monastic renewal. This counterbalanced but did not necessarily contradict a growing interest in classical education. The leading figure was Michael Psellos.
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