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Sir Steven Runciman’s History of the Crusades (1951–4) remains widely
read and influential to this day but represents only a part of his
wide-ranging, erudite and immensely readable literary output. His
early work focused on Byzantium in the tenth century (The Emperor
Romanus Lecapenus) and the history of the first Bulgarian empire. Later
he wrote with authority on ecclesiastical relations between the Eastern
and Western Churches (The Eastern Schism), and more generally on
Byzantine culture (Byzantine Style and Civilization), with forays into
medieval diplomacy (The Sicilian Vespers) and British colonial society
(The White Rajahs). With a diplomatic past which informed his work,
he was the doyen of Byzantine studies in Britain. This volume of essays
on topics relevant to Sir Steven’s interests, long planned in his honour
by British Byzantinists of all generations, includes a memoir of his life
and a full bibliography of his writings.
e l i z a b et h j e f f reys is Bywater and Sotheby Professor of Byzan-
tine and Modern Greek Language and Literature in the University of
Oxford, and Fellow of Exeter College; she has published extensively on
topics in Byzantine literature.
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Byzantine Style, Religion and
Civilization
In Honour of Sir Steven Runciman
e l i z a b et h j e f f reys
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cambridge university press Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town,Singapore, São Paulo, Delhi, Mexico City
Cambridge University PressTh e Edinburgh Building, Cambridge cb2 8ru, UK
Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York
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© Cambridge University Press 2006
Th is publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press.
First published 2006First paperback edition 2011
A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library
Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication Data
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Contents
List of figures page viii
List of contributors xiii
Acknowledgements xvii
List of abbreviations xviii
Bibliography of Sir Steven Runciman’s works xx
James Cochran Stevenson Runciman xxxix
a n t h o ny b rye r
P A R T I S T Y L E
1 The Christian Topography (Vat. gr. 699) revisited: image,
text, and conflict in ninth-century Byzantium 3
l e s l i e b ru ba ke r
2 Byzantine enamels in the twentieth century 25
dav i d bu c k to n
3 The rise and fall of towns, loci of maritime traffic, and silk
production: the problem of Thisvi–Kastorion 38
a rch i ba l d d u n n
4 Women in Serbian politics, diplomacy and art at
the beginning of Ottoman rule 72
z ag a g av r i l ov i c
5 Byzantium–Venice–Manchester: an early thirteenth-century
carved marble basin and British Byzantinism at the turn
of the twentieth century 91
lu c y - a n n e h u n t
6 Manners maketh Romans? Young barbarians at
the emperor’s court 135
j o nat h a n s h e pa rd
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vi Contents
7 Byzantine and crusader art: Sir Steven was right 159
d . c . w i n f i e l d
P A R T I I R E L I G I O N
8 The discovery of the relics of St Grigor and the development
of Armenian tradition in ninth-century Byzantium 177
t i m ot hy g re e nwo o d
9 The image of Edessa: some notes on its later fortunes 192
pau l h et h e r i n g to n
10 Photios as a theologian 206
a n d rew l o u t h
11 Magic at the crossroads in the sixth century 224
j . n i m m o - s m i t h
12 ‘The Angelic Life’: monasteries for eunuchs 238
s h au n to u g h e r
13 Armed pilgrimage and the reign of the anti-Christ: Steven
Runciman and the origins of the First Crusade 253
f. r . t ro m b l ey
P A R T I I I C I V I L I Z A T I O N
14 Wine for immortality and immortality for wine:
reflections
on the Dionysiaca of Nonnos of Panopolis 275
dav i d f re n d o
15 ‘Greek Fire’ revisited: recent and current research 290
j o h n h a l d o n
16 Constantinople in the reign of Basil II 326
c at h e r i n e h o l m e s
17 A short piece of narrative history: war and diplomacy
in the Balkans, winter 921/2–spring 924 340
j . d . h owa rd - j o h n s to n
18 Restoration of Orthodoxy, the pardon of Theophilos and
the Acta Davidis, Symeonis et Georgii 361
pat r i c i a ka r l i n - h ay te r
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Contents vii
19 Freestanding towers in the countryside of Rhodes 374
p. w. l o c k
20 The Campanopetra reconsidered: the pilgrimage church
of the Apostle Barnabas? 394
a . h . s . m e g aw
21 The travels of Paul Lucas 405
ly n ro d l ey
22 Aristocrats and aliens in early Byzantine Constantinople 413
pete r s a r r i s
Index 428
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Figures
1.1 The world in the shape of the tabernacle: Vat. gr. 699,
f. 39r page 6
1.2 The tabernacle in its precinct: Vat. gr. 699, f. 46v 10
1.3 The shewbread table and seven-branched candlestick:
Laur. plut. 9.28, f. 111v 10
1.4 The ark of the covenant with the high priests: Vat. gr. 699, f. 48r 12
1.5 The covered tabernacle in its court: Vat. gr. 699, f. 49r 13
1.6 The vestments of the high priest: Vat. gr. 699, f. 50r 14
1.7 The tabernacle in its court: Mount Athos, Pantokrator 61,
f. 165r 15
1.8 Christ and the witnesses to his incarnation: Vat. gr. 699, f. 76r 18
3.1 Western Boeotia (Late Roman) 43
3.2 Western Boeotia (medieval) 52
4.1 Rachel’s lament: fresco at Markov Manastir (1376-7) (Photo:
A. Gavrilovic) 73
4.2 Ljubostinja, Church of the Dormition (Photo: Institute for the
Protection of Historical Monuments of Serbia, Belgrade) 75
4.3 Ljubostinja, narthex: Prince Lazar and Princess Milica (Photo:
Institute for the Protection of Historical Monuments of Serbia,
Belgrade) 76
4.4 Ljubostinja, narthex: Princess Milica, detail (Photo: Institute
for the Protection of Historical Monuments of Serbia, Belgrade) 77
4.5 Jefimija’s enkolpion-diptych (Monastery of Hilandar, Mount
Athos) (Photo: G. Subotic) 78
4.6 Jefimija’s katapetasma (Monastery of Hilandar, Mount Athos)
(After D. Bogdanovic, V. J. Djuric, D. Medakovic, Hilandar,
Belgrade, 1978) 79
4.7 Jefimija’s pokrov (Museum of the Serbian Orthodox Church,
Belgrade) (Photo: G. Subotic) 80
4.8 Churches of the Mother of God and of St George on the
island of Gorica, Lake of Skadar (Photo: V. J. Djuric, Institute
for the History of Art, Faculty of Philosophy, Belgrade) 82
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List of figures ix
4.9a–b Group portrait of Despot Djuradj Brankovic and his
family on his chrysobull to the Monastery of Esphigmenou,
1429 (details) (Photo: G. Subotic). Mara is on the far right
of a; Kantakuzina is in the centre of b. 84
4.10 Embroidered mitre (Museum of the Serbian
Orthodox Church, Belgrade) (Photo: G. Subotic) 85
5.1 Manchester College of Art, sculpted basin, state before
c. 1997 (Photo: C© The Manchester Metropolitan University) 94
5.2 Manchester College of Art, sculpted basin, drawing (1903)
(After: A Descriptive Catalogue of the Arts and Crafts
Museum, Manchester Municipal School of Art (1903),
Plate 26) 95
5.3 Manchester College of Art, sculpted basin (2001), front and
right side (Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester Metropolitan
University) 95
5.4 Manchester College of Art, sculpted basin, interior, from
above (Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester Metropolitan
University) 96
5.5 Manchester College of Art, sculpted basin, front
(Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester Metropolitan University) 96
5.6 Manchester College of Art, sculpted basin, front, detail
of lion’s head (Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester
Metropolitan University) 97
5.7 Manchester College of Art, sculpted basin, back
(Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester Metropolitan University) 97
5.8 Manchester College of Art. Sculpted Basin, detail, top left of
back (Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester Metropolitan
University) 98
5.9 Manchester College of Art Collection, view across left end
(Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester Metropolitan
University) 98
5.10 Manchester College of Art, sculpted basin, right end
(Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester Metropolitan University) 99
5.11 Manchester College of Art, sculpted basin, lower centre
right end, detail (Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester
Metropolitan University) 99
5.12 Manchester College of Art Collection, former arch supports
and colonnettes (Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester
Metropolitan University) 100
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x List of figures
5.13 Manchester College of Art Collection, former arched
support of front (Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester
Metropolitan University) 100
5.14 Manchester College of Art Collection, former end support,
with plaster packing (Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester
Metropolitan University) 101
5.15 Manchester College of Art Collection, former colonnettes
(Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester Metropolitan University) 101
5.16 Manchester College of Art Collection, base of ensemble
(Photo: S. Yates C© The Manchester Metropolitan University) 102
5.17 Manchester College of Art, Gothic Court, Grosvenor Building,
c. 1900, view to east (Photo: C© The Manchester Metropolitan
University) 103
5.18 Manchester College of Art, view westwards from the Textile
Court into the Gothic Court, Grosvenor Building, c. 1900
(Photo: C© The Manchester Metropolitan University) 104
5.19 Manchester College of Art, students working in the
Tapestry Hall, Grosvenor Building, c. 1900 (Photo:
C© The Manchester Metropolitan University) 107
5.20 Venice, San Marco, sculpted panel from south balustrade
of upper gallery, west arm (Photo: after A. Colosanti with
C. Ricci, L’arte bizantina in Italia (Milan, c. 1912),
tav. 82(2)) 108
5.21 Venice, San Marco, sculpted panel from south balustrade of
upper gallery, west arm (Photo: after Colosanti, L’arte
bizantina, tav. 84 (1)) 108
5.22 Venice, San Marco, sculpted panel, wall of ramp leading to
south ambo (Photo: after Colosanti, L’arte bizantina,
tav. 86 (2)) 109
5.23 Torcello Cathedral, bas relief from west side of choir screen
(south end) (Photo: after Colosanti, L’arte bizantina,
tav. 85 (2)) 110
5.24 Torcello Cathedral, bas relief from south side of choir screen
(facing altar) (Photo: after Colosanti, L’arte bizantina,
tav. 85 (1)) 110
5.25 Cambridge, Fitzwilliam Museum, casket no. M.18–1904
(Photo: courtesy of the Fitzwilliam Museum) 112
5.26 Venice, San Marco, sculpted panel with rosette within
interlace motif, exterior, south wall of treasury (Photo:
L.-A. Hunt) 112
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List of figures xi
5.27 Venice, San Marco, north facade, roundel of eagle attacking
animal (Photo: L.-A. Hunt) 113
5.28 London, Victoria and Albert Museum (no. A.35–1931),
relief from Venice (Photo: courtesy of the Victoria and Albert
Museum, London) 114
5.29 Venice, Corte Seconda del Milion, sculpted archway, left side
(Photo: L.-A. Hunt) 115
5.30 Berlin, Museum fur Spatantike und Byzantinische Kunst,
Kat./Inv. – nr. 24 (Photo: Bildarchiv Preussischer Kulturbesitz,
Berlin) 117
7.1 Ankara, Ancyra: general view of the walls of the Middle
Byzantine hilltop town. The citadel is to the left. 161
7.2 Ankara, Ancyra: the prow-shaped towers of the Middle
Byzantine town. Prow towers are a typical feature of Middle
Byzantine fortification, in this case reusing classical masonry
from the city in the plain. 162
7.3 Sebinkarahisar, Koloneia, NE Turkey. A Middle Byzantine
hilltop castle that was possibly the headquarters of a theme. 163
9.1 The Chasse in the Sainte-Chapelle after the engraving in
Morand, Histoire. The ringed items indicate the reliquaries
of the mandylion (no. 18) and of a piece of the Holy
Sepulchre (no. 19); the original engraving measures
22.6 × 15.6 cm. 201
15.1 Schematic side elevation of the apparatus 300
15.2 Method of sealing joints and joining sections of pipes 301
15.3 Multi-directional/universal swivel apparatus 302
15.4 Valves 304
15.5 The Caucasus region 306
15.6 Taman and Maikop 307
15.7 Georgia 308
15.8 Boat burning in Malta 312
15.9 Boat burning in Malta 312
19.1 Freestanding towers in Rhodes 375
19.2 Glyfada, looking south 382
19.3 Kritikou, plan 383
19.4 Kritikou, looking east 384
19.5 Phourni, looking west 386
19.6 Pirgos (Palati), looking north-west 387
20.1 Campanopetra: the Basilica (restored plan, after Roux)
Scale 1:500 395
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xii List of figures
20.2 Campanopetra: the west court (restored plan, after Roux)
Scale 1:500 395
20.3 Campanopetra: the east court (restored plan – after Roux)
Scale 1:500 396
20.4 The Church of the Apostle Barnabas. Scale 1:400 396
20.5 Half-capital from the Campanopetra (after Roux) 397
20.6 Campanopetra: the ‘Impregnator’ (after Roux) 398
20.7 The Church of the Apostle Barnabas, from the north 402
20.8 The Campanopetra from the atrium, looking east
(after Roux) 402
21.1 Gerbil (Voyage dans la Grece, vol. 2, p. 74) 409
21.2 Pyramids near Urgup (Voyage dans la Grece, vol. 1, p. 74) 410
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Contributors
Anthony Bryer first met Steven Runciman in the House by Herod’s Gate
in Jerusalem in 1942. He is now emeritus Professor of Byzantine Studies in
the University of Birmingham.
Leslie Brubaker is Professor of Byzantine Art at Birmingham University.
Her publications include Vision and Meaning in Ninth-century Byzantium
(Cambridge, 1999) and Byzantium in the Iconoclast Era (c. 680–850): a history
(Cambridge, 2005).
David Buckton studied art history at the University of East Anglia, gradu-
ating in 1975, and at the Courtauld Institute, University of London. From
1978 to 2000 he was curator of the Early Christian and Byzantine collec-
tions at the British Museum, in addition to Carolingian, Ottonian, Salian
and Eastern Orthodox art. From 1983 to 2000 he was also responsible for
the National Icon Collection.
Archie Dunn is a Research Fellow in the Institute of Archaeology and Antiq-
uity at Birmingham University. He specializes in the history and archaeo-
logy of Late Antique and Byzantine Greece and Cyprus, and in Byzantine
sigillography.
David Frendo graduated in classics from University College London in
1963 and studied for a PhD under Robert Browning, which he was awarded
in 1968. He was Lecturer in Classics at the Royal University of Malta from
1965 to 1969 and Statutory Lecturer in Ancient Classics at University College
Cork until 1997. His research interests are in the fields of early Byzantine
poetry and Late Antique and early Byzantine history, especially Byzantine–
Sasanian relations.
Zaga Gavrilovic studied art history in the University of Belgrade and sub-
sequently in Paris. Since 1980 she has been associated with the Centre for
Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies in the University of Birm-
ingham, as an Honorary Fellow of the Institute for Advanced Research in
the Humanities; from 2002 she has also been an associate member of the
Institute for Medieval Studies in the University of Nottingham. In 2003
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xiv List of contributors
she was elected a member of the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts in
Belgrade.
Timothy Greenwood’s research is focused on the Armenian contribution
to Byzantine society. After holding post-doctoral fellowships at the Univer-
sity of Oxford he is now Lecturer in Byzantine History at the University of
St Andrews.
John Haldon is Professor of Byzantine History at Princeton University. His
research focuses on the history of the early and middle Byzantine empire,
in particular in the period from the sixth to the eleventh centuries, on state
systems and structures across the European and Islamic worlds from Late
Antique to early modern times and on the production, distribution and
consumption of resources in the late Roman and medieval world, espe-
cially in the context of warfare. He has published many books and articles,
including Byzantium in the Seventh Century (Cambridge, 1997), Warfare,
State and Society in the Byzantine World (London, 1999), Byzantium: a his-
tory (Stroud, 2000), and The Palgrave Atlas of Byzantine History (London,
2005).
Paul Hetherington studied art history at the Courtauld Institute, London,
taking his first degree there in 1962 as well as his PhD in 1968. His pub-
lications include a translation and commentary on The Painter’s Manual
of Dionysius of Fourna (London, 1974), two guide books to the Byzantine
buildings of mainland Greece and of the Greek Islands, and a number of
articles on Byzantine enamel.
Catherine Holmes is a tutor and University Lecturer in Medieval History
at University College, Oxford. Her publications include Basil II and the
Governance of Empire (976–1025) (Oxford, 2005).
James Howard-Johnston is University Lecturer in Byzantine Studies in
the University of Oxford. His main research interests lie currently in
international relations at the end of Antiquity and in the early Middle
Ages.
Lucy-Anne Hunt is Professor and Head of the School of History of Art
and Design at Manchester Metropolitan University. She is the author of
Byzantium, Eastern Christendom and Islam: art at the crossroads of the
medieval Mediterranean, 2 vols. (London, 1998 and 2000) and The Min-
gana and Related Collections: a survey of illustrated Arabic, Greek, Eastern
Christian, Persian and Turkish manuscripts in the Selly Oak Colleges, Birm-
ingham (Birmingham, 1997). Her present interests and publications focus
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List of contributors xv
on cross-cultural analysis between Byzantine and Islamic, and Christian
and Muslim art and culture in the Middle Ages through study of Byzantine,
Eastern Christian and ‘Crusader’ art, as well as East–West cultural relations
in the Middle Ages.
Patricia Karlin-Hayter was educated in Bordeaux and Birmingham; she
was assistant to Henri Gregoire, and has edited the Vita Euthymii. She is the
author of many articles on Byzantine peasant society, monasticism, tenth-
century intellectual history, circus factions, iconoclasm and hagiography.
She is currently working on a book on iconoclasm.
Peter Lock is Professor of History at York St John University College, York.
He is co-editor with Guy Sanders of The Archaeology of Medieval Greece
(Oxford, 1996) and author of The Franks in the Aegean (London, 1995)
and the Routledge Companion to the Crusades (London, 2006). He is cur-
rently translating the crusade works of Marino Sanudo Torsello for Ashgate
Crusader Texts in Translation.
Andrew Louth is Professor of Patristic and Byzantine Studies in the Univer-
sity of Durham and the author of several books, including St John Damascene:
Tradition and Originality in Byzantine Theology (Oxford, 2002).
A. H. S. Megaw was for many years Director of Antiquities, Cyprus.
Jennifer Nimmo Smith is a post-doctoral scholar with a long-standing
honorary link with the School of History and Classics at the University
of Edinburgh, where she tutors part-time in Greek. Her translation of the
Pseudo-Nonnos Commentaries on Sermons 4, 5, 39, and 43 by Gregory of
Nazianzos was published as A Christian’s Guide to Greek Culture (Liverpool,
2001).
Lyn Rodley is the author of Byzantine Art and Architecture (Cambridge,
1994); she teaches for the Open University and Morley College in London.
She is currently Helen Waddell Visiting Professor at Queen’s University
Belfast in the Institute of Byzantine Studies.
Peter Sarris is University Lecturer in Medieval History in the University of
Cambridge and a Fellow of Trinity College. He is author of Economy and
Society in the Age of Justinian (Cambridge, 2006).
Jonathan Shepard was for many years University Lecturer in Russian His-
tory at the University of Cambridge. He was co-editor, with Simon Franklin,
of Byzantine Diplomacy (Aldershot, 1992) and is editor of the Cambridge
History of the Byzantine Empire (Cambridge, forthcoming).
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xvi List of contributors
Shaun Tougher is Lecturer in Ancient History in the Cardiff School of
History and Archaeology at Cardiff University, and has also taught at Queen’s
University Belfast and the University of St Andrews. He specializes in late
Roman and Byzantine history, and has written several articles on subjects
such as eunuchs, Julian the Apostate and Leo VI. He is the author of The Reign
of Leo VI (886–912) (Leiden, 1997) and the editor of Eunuchs in Antiquity
and Beyond (London, 2002). He is currently preparing a monograph on
Byzantine eunuchs.
Frank Trombley is Reader in Byzantine and Early Islamic History at Cardiff
University and author of Hellenic Religion and Christianization c. 370–529 ad
(Leiden, 1993–4); he collaborated with John W. Watt in the translation and
commentary The Chronicle of Pseudo-Joshua the Stylite (Liverpool, 2000). He
is currently working on a book entitled War in Byzantine Culture and Society.
His various articles deal with such subjects as the impact of endemic war on
Byzantine culture and society, Greek and Arabic epigraphy in the villages
of Syria, and towns and their rural territories in early medieval Greece and
Asia Minor.
David Winfield divided his career between Byzantine studies, about which
he has written extensively, and conservation work, for which he was awarded
an MBE in 1973. He was the first Surveyor of Conservation to the National
Trust.
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Acknowledgements
This book has been far too long in the making, for which the final editor
offers her share of the apologies. It had its origins in the wish to honour Sir
Steven on the occasion of his ninetieth birthday, when a small conference
was held in Glenesk in Scotland. The contributors and their themes have
evolved over the intervening years, and alas, Sir Steven is no longer with
us to receive his volume. It is offered as a modest memorial to the wide
range of interests of that most courteous and accomplished of historians:
the book’s title is intended to reflect those interests. The contributors span
the generations of British Byzantinists, from those who had known him
throughout their academic lives to more recent entrants to the field, who
came to appreciate his role as President of the Society for the Promotion of
Byzantine Studies.
Thanks are due to Michael Angold for initiating this enterprise, to the
British Academy for permission to reproduce Anthony Bryer’s memoir of
Sir Steven, and to William Davis and Michael Sharp at Cambridge University
Press for their patience and helpfulness. But especial thanks are due to Ann
Shukman for her support throughout the preparation of this book, and
most particularly for her vital role in the compilation of the bibliography of
Sir Steven’s writings.
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Abbreviations
Classical authors are cited as in LSJ.
AASS Acta Sanctorum
AB Analecta Bollandiana
AJA American Journal of Archaeology
B.A.R.i.s. British Archaeological Reports, International Series
BF Byzantinische Forschungen
BHG Biblioteca Hagiographica Graeca
BMGS Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies
BSA Annual of the British School at Athens
BZ Byzantinische Zeitschrift
CA Cahiers archeologiques
DOP Dumbarton Oaks Papers
���� ����� �� ����������� ��������� ������� CR Classical Review
EEBS ������ ������� ���������� ������EHR English Historical Review
GRBS Greek, Roman and Byzantine Studies
JHS Journal of Hellenic Studies
JOB Jahrbuch der osterreichischen Byzantinistik
JOBG Jahrbuch der osterreichischen byzantinischen Gesellschaft
JRS Journal of Roman Studies
JWAG Journal of the Walters Art Gallery
Lampe G. W. H. Lampe, A Patristic Greek Lexikon (Oxford,
1961–8)
LBG E. Trapp, ed., Lexikon zur byzantinischen Grazitat besonders
des 9.–12. Jahrhunderts (Vienna, 1994–)
LSJ H. S. Jones, H. G. Liddell and R. Scott, eds., revised P. Glare,
A Greek–English Lexikon (Oxford, 1996)
MA Medium Aevum
MGH Monumenta Germaniae Historica
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List of abbreviations xix
MGH, ScripRerMer Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Scriptores Rerum
Merovingicarum
MGH, AA Monumenta Germaniae Historica, Auctores
Antiquissimi
ODB A. Kazhdan and others, eds., Oxford Dictionary of
Byzantium (New York and Oxford, 1991)
PBE J. R. Martindale, ed., Prosopography of the Byzantine
Empire, 641–876 [CD-rom] (London, 1999)
PG Patrologia Graeca
PGM Papyri Graecae Magicae, ed. K. Preisendanz, 2 vols.
(Leipzig, 1928–31)
PLRE I A. H. M. Jones, J. R. Martindale, and J. Morris, The
Prosopography of the Later Roman Empire, vol. 1,
ad 260–395 (Cambridge, 1971)
PLRE II J. R. Martindale, ed., The Prosopography of the Later
Roman Empire, vol. 2, ad 395–527 (Cambridge,
1980)
PLRE III J. R. Martindale, ed., The Prosopography of the Later
Roman Empire, vol. 3, ad 527–641 (Cambridge,
1992)
PmbZ I R.-J. Lilie and others, eds., Prosopographie der
mittelbyzantinischen Zeit, Erste Abteilung (641–867)
(Berlin, 1999)
PO Patrologia Orientalis
PTS Patristische Texte und Studien
RE Pauly-Wissowa, Real-Enkyklopedie
REB Revue des etudes byzantines
REG Revue des etudes grecques
TM Travaux et memoires
TLS Times Literary Supplement
VV Vizantiiskii Vremenik
ZRVI Zbornik Radova Vizantoloskog Instituta
Note that the usual problems of consistent transliteration of Greek names are
particularly acute when a book’s subject matter spans the centuries. Rather
than descend into an abyss of pedantry, a certain inconsistency has been
allowed, particularly over place names referring to places in present-day
Greece.
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Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography
This bibliography has been largely compiled from the comprehensive collec-
tion of off-prints and other materials contained in Sir Steven’s own library;
Judith Gilliland made sense of the piles of notes.
Translations are listed under the original publication in chronological
order, indicating language, title, publishing house, place, date.
1929
The Emperor Romanus Lecapenus and his Reign: a study of tenth-century Byzantium
(Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1929); reprinted 1963, 1969; pb 1988
1930
A History of the First Bulgarian Empire (G. Bell & Sons, London, 1930) (‘Dedicated
by gracious permission to Boris III, Tsar of Bulgaria’)
Translation: [Bulgarian] Istoriia na p‘rvoto b’lgarsko tsarstvo (IK ‘Ivan Vazov’/‘Siluet’
OOD, Sofia, 1993)
1929/31
‘Some remarks on the Image of Edessa’, Cambridge Historical Journal 3 (1929/31),
pp. 238 f.
1933
Byzantine Civilization (E. Arnold & Co., London, 1933); reprinted four times;
reprinted Meridian Books, New York 1956–60; reprinted Methuen, London, 1961
(University Paperbacks 35); reprinted Folio Society, London, 2004 (= G. Hen-
derson, ed., The Age of Illumination, vol. 3, Byzantine Art and Civilisation), see
2004
Translations
[French] La Civilisation byzantine (Payot, Paris, 1934)
[Spanish] La civilizacion bizantina (Ediciones Pegaso, Madrid, 1942)
[Italian] La civilta bizantina (Sansoni, Florence, 1960 (Le Piccole Storie Illustrate
40)
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Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography xxi
[German] Byzanz (Kindler Verlag, Munich, 1969; reprint 1976 (Kindlers
Kulturgeschichte des Abendslandes in 22 Banden, Band VIII)
[Greek] �� ��������! ������"# (Hermeias, Athens, 1969, 1983, 2004)
[Portuguese] A civilizacao bizantina (Zahar Editores, Rio de Janeiro, 1977)
1934
Review: M. Spinka, A History of Christianity in the Balkans, in Byzantion 9 (1934),
pp. 466–7
1935
‘The Great Schism between the Orthodox and Catholic Churches’, Religion: The
Journal of Transactions of the Society for Promoting the Study of Religion 11 (1935),
pp. 21–34
‘Charlemagne and Palestine’, EHR 50 (October 1935), pp. 606–19
1939
‘Bogomil and Jeremiah’, Bulletin de la Societe Historique Bulgare 16–17 (1939),
pp. 379–83 (Recueil dedie a la memoire du Professeur Peter Nikov)
Review: Stephen Gaselee, The Language of Diplomacy, in The Cambridge Review
(8 June 1939), pp. 485–6
1940
‘The Widow Danelis’, in Etudes dediees a la memoire d’Andre Andreades (Athens,
1940), pp. 425–31
1942
‘The Byzantine contribution to our civilisation’, in Forum: The Jerusalem Radio
Magazine (23 October 1942), p. 4
1943
‘Tarih Devirleri Boyunca Istanbul’, Yazan: Prof. Steven Runciman, Tarihten Sesler:
Aylik Tarih Mecmuasi 1 (4) (15 Nisan [1943]), pp. 18–22 [in Turkish]
‘Orta caglardaki Baslarinda Avrupu ve Turkler’, Turk Tarih Kurumu Basimevi 7 (25)
(1943), pp. 43–57
Lecture: ‘Anadolu’nun Orta caglardaki Rolu’, Turk Tarih Kurumu Basimevi 7 (27)
(1943), pp. 549–56 (lecture given at conference on 23 May 1942, according to
footnote)
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xxii Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography
1944
Lecture: ‘The Iranian influence on mediaeval European culture’ (British Council,
Tehran), 13 pp. with translation into Persian (public lecture at the Anglo-Persian
Institute, Tehran, 26 September 1944)
‘Konyayi ziyaret’ in Biz ve dunya (26 Haziran 1944), pp. 9, 14
1947
The Medieval Manichee: a study of the Christian dualist heresy (Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge, 1947); reprinted 1955; pb 1982
Translations
[French] Le Manicheisme medieval (Payot, Paris, 1949; reprinted 1972)
[German] Haresie und Christentum: der mittelalterliche Manichaismus (Wilhelm
Fink Verlag, Munich, 1988)
[Spanish] Los Maniqueos de la edad media (Fondo de Cultura Economica, Mexico
City, 1989)
[Polish] Sredniowieczny Manicheizm (Wydawnictwo Marabut, Gdansk, 1996)
‘The diffusion of Greek culture VII. Byzantium and the East’, The Geographical
Magazine 19 (9) (1947), pp. 410–20
1948
‘Impressions of Modern Greece’, United Empire 39 (2) (March/April 1948),
pp. 80 ff.
‘The Byzantine “Protectorate” in the Holy Land in the XIth century’, Byzantion 18
(1948), pp. 207–15
1949
‘The First Crusaders’ journey across the Balkan peninsula’, Byzantion 19 (1949),
pp. 207–21 (Actes du VIIe congres des etudes byzantines, I)
‘Marcion’, The Cornhill Magazine 163 (1947/9), pp. 458–70
Review: N. H. Baynes, H. St. L. B. Moss, eds., Byzantium: an introduction to East
Roman civilization, in TLS (26 February 1949)
Review: E. C. Blackman, Marcion and his Influence, in TLS (17 June 1949)
1950
‘The Holy Lance found at Antioch’, AB 68 (1950), pp. 197–209 (Melanges Paul
Peeters)
Lecture: ‘Life in Greece: a talk’, given on 11 November, 3 p.m., at British Council
House, Liverpool, for Liverpool Greek ‘Week’, 9–21 November 1950
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Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography xxiii
1951
A History of the Crusades, vol. 1: The First Crusade and the Foundation of the Kingdom
of Jerusalem (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1951); reprinted 1951,
1953, 1954, 1957, 1962, 1968, 1975; abridged edition 1980, 2005; pb Canto, 1992
Translations
[Italian] La Prima Crociata (Edizione Piemmi, Casale Monferrato, 1996; pb 2001)
[Polish] Pierwsza Krucjata (Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Marii Curie-
Sklodowskiej, Lublin, 1998)
‘Byzantine and Hellene in the fourteenth century’, in G. Michaelides-Nouaros,
$#" %&�������� '�"���(��, )�* � +, )-���������� �, ��-�����
�.�/ (1345–1945) (0��������"&� 1�������� , ���2 3"��4� ��*
�5��"��4� 6������"&�, Thesaloniki, 1952), pp. 27–31
‘The Crusades of 1101’, JOBG 1 (1951), pp. 3–12
Review: S. G. F. Brandon, The Fall of Jerusalem and the Christian Church: a study
of the effects of the Jewish overthrow of AD 70 on Christianity, in TLS (12 October
1951)
1952
A History of the Crusades, vol. 2: The Kingdom of Jerusalem and the Frankish East,
1100–1187 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1952); reprinted 1954, 1957,
1962, 1968, 1979
‘Byzantium and the East’, in M. Huxley, ed., The Root of Europe: studies in the diffusion
of Greek culture (London, The Geographical Magazine, 1952), pp. 73–84
‘Byzantine trade and industry’, in Cambridge Economic History of Europe, vol. 2:
Trade and Industry in the Middle Ages, ed. M. M. Postan and E. Miller (Cambridge
University Press, Cambridge, 1952), revised and reprinted 1987
‘The rise of Islam’, The Listener 48 (18 September 1952), pp. 463 ff.
Review: J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, The Barbarian West, 400–1000, in TLS (27 June 1952)
Review: C. H. Roberts and E. G. Turner, eds., Catalogue of the Greek and Latin Papyri
in the John Rylands Library, Manchester, vol. 4, in TLS (18 July 1952)
Review: G. S. Moncrieff, The Scottish Islands, in TLS (22 August 1952)
1953
‘ 67 %&��������(��� ��!� 89 ��* 8�9 �54��’, '����������2 6���:������ 6 (2)
(1953), pp. 5–20
‘Byzantine linguists’, 0��;�< �5 ��5��&�� 0. %�������� (= ��������<,
���<���"� 4; Thessaloniki, 1953), pp. 596–602
‘The fall of Byzantium – II’, The Listener 49 (14 June 1953), pp. 930 ff.
‘Zante’, The Architectural Review (October 1953), pp. 215–19
Review: E. Waugh, The Holy Places, in TLS (23 January 1953)
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xxiv Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography
Review: E. Lear (ed. R. Murphy), Edward Lear’s Indian Journey, in TLS (3 April 1953)
Review: E. R. A. Sewter, trans., The Chronographia of Michael Psellus, in TLS
(15 May 1953)
Review: C. C. Mierow, trans., Otto of Freising, Rahewin of Freising, The Deeds of
Frederick Barbarossa, in TLS (11 September 1953)
Review: E. Lear, Nonsense Songs, in TLS (20 November 1953)
Review: E. Lear (A. Davidson, P. Hofer, eds.), Teapots and Quails, and other New
Nonsenses, in TLS (20 November 1953)
Review: R. Warner, Eternal Greece, in TLS (27 November 1953)
Review: G. Murray, Hellenism and the Modern World: Six Talks on the Radio-Diffusion
Francaise and the BBC, in TLS (27 November 1953)
Review: Jack Lindsay, Byzantium into Europe, in Time and Tide (24 January 1953),
pp. 116–17
Review: S. L. Greenslade, Schism in the Early Church, in Time and Tide (21 February
1953), pp. 248–9
Review: Freya Stark, The Coast of Incense, in The Listener (29 October 1953)
1954
A History of the Crusades, vol. 3: The Kingdom of Acre and the Later Crusades (Cam-
bridge University Press, Cambridge, 1954); reprinted with corrections 1955, 1966,
1975, 1979, 1980, 1987, 1988, 1989, 1990, 1993, 1995; pb 1987
A History of the Crusades, vols. 1–3 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1979),
pb 1987; pb Peregrine Books, 1965; Harper Torchbooks, New York, 1964–7; boxed
sets: Cambridge University Press, 1954, 1987 and The Folio Society, 1994
Translations
[Spanish] Historia de las Cruzadas (Revista de Occidente, Madrid, 1956–8; 3 vols.
Alianza Editorial, Madrid, 1973
[German] Geschichte der Kreuzzuge (C. H. Beck Verlag, Munich, 1957–60 in
3 vols.; pb Deutscher Taschenbuch Verlag, Munich, 1995, 2003 in 1 vol.)
[Italian] Storia delle Crociate (Einaudi, Turin, 1966, 1993 in 2 vols; Edizione CDE
spa, Milan, 1994 in 2 vols.; pb 1993)
[French] Histoire des Croisades (vol. I, Editions Dagorno, Paris, 1998)
[Greek] � 8���� �4� �����;��4� (Sumpleromatikai Ekdoseis, Athens,
1977–9 in 3 vols.)
[Polish] Dzieje Wypraw Krzyzowych (Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczny,
Warszawa, 1987 in 3 vols.)
[Hungarian] A Keresztes Hadjaratok Tortenete (Osiris Kado, Budapest, 1999 in
1 vol.)
[Portuguese] Historia das Cruzadas (Imago Editora, Rio de Janeiro, 2002–3 in
3 vols.)
‘Saladin, a great leader of Islam’, The Listener 51 (15 April 1954), pp. 648 ff.
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Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography xxv
Review: A. A. Vasiliev, History of the Byzantine Empire, 324–1453, in CR 4 (1954),
p. 284
Review: K. Andrews, Castles of the Morea, in TLS (12 February 1954)
Review: T. J. B. Spencer, Fair Greece Sad Relic, in TLS (14 May 1954)
Review: R. Liddell, Aegean Greece, in TLS (14 May 1954)
Review: P. Kinross, Within the Taurus: a journey in Asiatic Turkey, in TLS (5 November
1954)
Review: Wilfrid Blunt, Pietro’s Pilgrimage in The Listener (29 July 1954), p. 185
1955
The Eastern Schism: a study of the papacy and the Eastern Churches during the XIth
and XIIth centuries (Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1955); reprinted 1956, 1963; pb
Panther History, London, 1970; pb Wipf and Stock, Eugene, Oregon, 2005) (The
Waynflete Lectures, 1954)
Translations
[Polish] Schizma wschodnia (Instytut Wydawniczy ‘Pax’, Warszawa, 1983)
[Russian] Vostochnaia skhizma (Nauka: Vostochnaia Literatura RAN, Moscow,
1998 (together with Byzantine Theocracy, 1977)
[French] (Les Belles Lettres, Paris, forthcoming)
‘The Fall of Byzantium’, in The Fall of Constantinople: a symposium held at the
School of Oriental and African Studies, 29 May 1953 (School of Oriental and
African Studies, University of London, 1955), pp. 5–11
‘Richard Coeur-de-Lion’, History Today 5 (4) (April 1955), pp. 219–27 (reprinted
History Today (July 1991), pp. 50–6)
‘The Byzantine provincial peoples and the Crusade’, Relazioni del X Congresso
Internationale di Scienze Storiche (Roma, 4–11settembre 1955), vol. 3: Storia del
medioevo (Sansoni, Florence, 1955), pp. 621–4
‘The decline of the Crusading idea’, in Relazioni del X Congresso Internazionale di
Scienze Storiche (Roma, 4–11 settembre 1955), vol. 3: Storia del medioevo (Sansoni,
Florence, 1955), pp. 637–52; reprinted, Bobbs-Merrill Reprint Series in
European History, Indianapolis,
‘Feudalism – not for export’, The Saturday Review (10 December 1955), pp. 44–8
Review: J. J. O’Meara, The Young Augustine: the growth of St Augustine’s mind up to
his conversion, in TLS (4 February 1955)
1956
‘The popular bronze reliquary crosses of Byzantium’, in G. Gsodam, ed., Festschrift
W. Sas-Zaloziecky zum 60. Geburtstag (Akademische Druk- u. Verlagsanstalt, Graz,
1956), pp. 154–7
‘Istanbul’un Sukutu’, Istanbul Entstiusu Dergisi 2 (Istanbul 1956), pp. 185–9 (trans-
lation of ‘The Fall of Byzantium’, 1955, see above)
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xxvi Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography
‘The Greeks in Antioch at the time of the Crusades’, 0�����"=�� �/ 19 ���:�> ��������o����/ ������� 1�������� (= ��������<, ���<���"� 9;
Thessaloniki, 1956), vol. 2, pp. 583–91
‘The Holy Land: centre of the world’, Geographical Magazine 29 (8) (1956), pp. 363–
73
‘Baghdad and Constantinople’, Sumer 12 (1/2) (1956), pp. 43 ff. [in Arabic,
pp. 101 ff.]
‘On the writing of history’, The Historical Association (Great Britain) Jubilee Addresses
1956 (G. Philip, London, 1956), pp. 62–72 (lecture on 5 January in the Beveridge
Hall, Senate House, University of London)
‘Christians in Arab lands’, The Times (8 June 1956), pp. 11, 13
Review: J. Smet, ed., The Life of Saint Peter Thomas by Philip de Mezieres, in MA 25
(1956), pp. 128 ff.
Review: N. H. Baynes, Byzantine Studies and Other Essays, in CR 6 (1956), p. 158
Review: M. G. S. Hodgson, The Order of Assassins, in TLS (2 March 1956)
Review: R. C. Smail, Crusading Warfare, 1097–1193, in TLS (3 August 1956)
Review: A. Graham, Interval in Indo-China, in TLS (12 October 1956)
Review: F. Dvornik, The Slavs: their early history and civilization, in TLS (9 December
1956)
1957
Lecture: ‘Byzantium, Russia and Caesaropapism’, Canadian Slavonic Papers, vol. II
(Toronto, 1957), pp. 1–10 (lecture on 29 January at the Department of Slavic
Studies, University of Toronto)
Lecture: ‘The story of world history’, given at the University of the East, Manila,
Monday, 25 February 1957
Lecture: ‘Europe and the East: historical background’, given at the Far Eastern Uni-
versity, Manila, on Tuesday, 26 February 1957
Lecture: ‘The study of world history’, 1–8 = UE Public Service series no. 7, Manila
(lecture sponsored by the Philippine British Society and the British Embassy in
Manila; delivered at the University of the East)
Review: C. Chakrabongse, The Twain Have Met; or, an eastern prince came west, in
TLS (25 January 1957)
Review: B. Groslier and A. Jacques (trans. E. Earnshaw), Angkor, in TLS (2 August
1957)
Review: G. Sparrow, Opium Venture, in TLS (4 October 1957)
Review: E. Barker, Social and Political Thought in Byzantium, in TLS (20 December
1957)
1958
The Sicilian Vespers: a history of the Mediterranean world in the later thirteenth century
(Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1958); pb 1982
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Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography xxvii
Translations
[German] Die Sizilianische Vesper (C. H. Beck Verlag, Munich, 1959; new edition
1976)
[Spanish] Visperas Sicilianas (‘Revista de Occidente’, Madrid, 1961; new edition
Alianza Editorial, 1979)
[Italian] I vespri siciliani (Dedalo Libri, Bari, 1971; Rizzoli editore, Milan, 1976)
[Dutch] De siciliaanse Vespers (‘Agon’, Amsterdam, 1988)
[Romanian] Vecerniile Siciliene (Editura Enciclopedica, Bucharest, 1993)
[Polish] Nieszpory Sycylijskie (Wydawnictwo ‘Ksia�znica’, Katowice, 1997)
[Hungarian] A sziciliai vecsernye (Balassi Kiado, Budapest, 1999)
[Greek] �������* �������� (Ekdoseis Gkovoste, Athens, 2003)
Review: C. Chakrabongse, First-Class Ticket, in TLS (13 June 1958)
Review: S. R. Rau, View to the Southeast, in TLS (1 August 1958)
Review: J. M. Hussey, The Byzantine World, in CR 8 (1958), pp. 294–5
1959
‘Pope Nicholas III and Byzantine Gold’, in Melanges offerts a Etienne Gilson de
l’Academie Francaise (Pontifical Institute of Medieval Studies, Paris/Toronto,
1959), pp. 537–45
Review: F. Dvornik, The Idea of Apostolicity in Byzantium and the Legend of the
Apostle Andrew, in Speculum 34 (3) (July 1959), pp. 463–5
Review: W. I. Brandt, ed., Pierre Dubois: The Recovery of the Holy Land, in MA 28
(1959), p. 5
Review: Norman Cohn, The Pursuit of the Millenium, in The Observer (28 July 1959)
1960
The White Rajahs: a history of Sarawak from 1841 to 1946 (Cambridge University
Press, Cambridge, 1960); pb, S. Abdul Majeed & Co, Kuala Lumpur, 1992
Translation: [Italian] Il rajah bianco (Rizzoli Editore, Milan, 1977)
‘The Eastern Orthodox Church after the break with Rome’, talk announced in The
Christian Religion and its Philosophy: BBC Broadcasts to Schools, Summer Term
1959–60, p. 31
‘Eruditos britanicos en Espana en la Edad Media: estudos y notas’, Arbor 47 (179)
(November 1960), pp. 64 ff.
‘The Crown of Jerusalem’, Palestine Exploration Quarterly (January–June 1960),
pp. 8–18
‘The ladies of the Mongols’, in N. V. Tomadakes, ed., �5 "��"�� %. 6 8. 6�"<���,
1864–1960 (Athens, 1960), pp. 46–53
‘The Families of Outremer: the feudal nobility of the Crusader Kingdom of
Jerusalem, 1099–1291’ (Athlone Press, University of London, 1960) (=Creighton
memorial lecture on history, 1959), 25 pp.
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xxviii Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography
Lectures: The Gifford Lectures, 1960: ‘The Orthodox Greek Church from the Schism
with the West to the Fall of Constantinople’, in School III, St Salvator’s College, 18,
25 October; 1, 8, 15, 22, 29 November; 1, 6 December, University of St Andrews
session 1960–1; 20 November 1960 [Martinmas Term]: preacher at the University
Service in the University of St Andrew’s, text from the Parable of the Talents (Matt.
25. 15)
1961
‘No Independent Prince (1861)’, Sarawak Museum Journal 10 (17/18) (July–
December 1961), pp. 30 ff.
Review: V. Vatasainu, Istoria artei feudale ın Tarile Romıne, vol. 1: Arta ın perioada
de dezvo feudalismului, in Speculum 36 (2) (April 1961), pp. 359–60
Review: Richard Koebner, Empire, and Z. A. B. Zeman, The Break-up of the Habsburg
Empire, in The Listener (7 December 1961), pp. 993–4
1962
‘The Crusader States, 1243–1291’, chapter XVI in K. M. Setton, R. L. Wolff and H. W.
Hazard, eds., A History of the Crusades, vol. II: The Later Crusades, 1189–1311
(University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, 1962, 2nd edn. 1969), pp. 557–
98
‘The schism between the Eastern and Western Churches’, Anglican Theological Review
44 (4) (1962), pp. 337–50
Foreword to M. A. Murray, The Witch-cult in Western Europe (Clarendon Press,
Oxford, 1962)
Lecture: ‘Medieval history and the romantic imagination’ (the Katja Reissner Lecture
of the Royal Society of Literature, 13 December 1962)
1963
Lectures: ‘Personal contacts between Christians and Moslems in the Middle Ages’
(Alexander White Visiting Professor series, Department of History, University of
Chicago, April 2, 4, 9, 11, 16, 18, 1963)
Review: J. J. Saunders, Aspects of the Crusades, in Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society
of Great Britain and Ireland 1/2 (1963), pp. 83 ff.
Review: R. W. Southern, Western Views of Islam in the Middle Ages, in Speculum 38
(3) (July 1963), pp. 505–6
1964
‘Byzantine society: an early democracy’, Apollo Magazine 79 (25) (March 1964),
pp. 199–204
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Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography xxix
‘Islam and Christendom in the Middle Ages: the need for restatement’, Islamic Studies
3 (2) (1964), pp. 193–8
‘Byzantine art and western mediaeval taste’, in Byzantine Art, a European Art: report
on the ninth exhibition of the Council of Europe held in Athens, 1 April–15 June
1964, pp. 3–20
Review: A. S. Atiya, Crusade, Commerce and Culture, in Speculum 39 (1) (January
1964), pp. 110–12
Review: P. Maas and C. A. Trypanis, eds., Sancti Romani Melodi Cantica: cantica
genuina, in CR 14 (2) (1964) pp. 144–5
Review: G. Mathew, Byzantine Aesthetics, in CR 14 (2) (1964), pp. 205–6
Review: H. Antoniadis-Bibicou, Recherches sur les douanes a Byzance, in Economic
History Review Series 2 17 (1) (August 1964), p. 178
Notice: Angelo Procopiou, The Macedonian Question in Byzantine Painting, in CR
14 (1) (1964), p. 119
1965
The Fall of Constantinople, 1453 (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 1965);
pb 1969; reprinted Canto edition 1990
Translations
[German] Die Eroberung von Konstantinopel (C. H. Beck Verlag, Munich, 1966;
reprinted 1969; DeutscherTaschenbuch Verlag, Munich, 1977)
[Polish] Upadek Konstantynopolia 1453 (Panstwowy Instytut Wydawniczny,
Warszawa, 1968; reprinted 1994)
[French] La Chute de Constantinople 1453 (Hachette, Paris, 1968)
[Italian], La caduta di Costantinopoli 1453 (Feltrinelli Editore, Milan, 1968);
new edition, Gli ultimi giorni di Costantinopoli (Edizioni Piemme, Casale
Monferrato, 1997); new edition, La caduta di Costantinopoli (Piemme Pocket,
2001)
[Japanese] [The Fall of Constantinople] (Misuzu Shobo, np, 1969; reprinted 1991)
[Czech] Pad Carihradu (‘Mlada Fronta’, Prague, 1970; new edition ‘Epocha’, 2003)
[Romanian] Caderea Constantinopului 1453 (Editura stiintifica, Bucharest, 1971;
new edition Editura Enciclopedica, Bucharest, 1991)
[Turkish] Kostantiniye dustu (Milliyet Yayinlari, Istanbul, 1972; reprinted
‘Ceriven: Derin Turkomer’, Istanbul, 1991)
[Spanish] La caıda de Constantinopla (Espasa-Calpe, Madrid, 1973)
[Greek] 7 <�&�� �� %&����������#��& (Ekdoseis Mpergade, Athens, 1979;
new edition, Ekdoseis Papadima, Athens, 2002)
[Dutch] De val van Constantinopel 1453 (Fibula-Van Dishoek, Haarlem, 1979)
[Russian] Padenie Konstantinopolia v 1453 godu (Nauka: Glavnaia Redaktsiia
vostochnoi literatury, Moscow, 1984)
[Bulgarian] Padaneto na Konstantinopol (Izd. Na Otechestvenniia Front, Sofia,
1984)
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xxx Sir Steven Runciman: a bibliography
[Serbian] Pad Tsarigrada 1453 (Matica Srpska, Novi Sad, 1990; reprinted 1996)
[Hungarian] Konstantiapoly eleste 1453 (Osiris Kiado, Budapest, 2000)
[Portuguese] A queda de Constantinopla 1453 (Imago Editora, Rio de Janeiro,
2002)
[Macedonian] Padot Konstantinopol 1453 (Slovo, Skopje, 2004)
[Korean] [The Fall of Constantinople] (Galapagos Publishing Co., np, 2004)
‘The Greek Church under the Ottoman Turks’, Studies in Church History 2 (1965),
pp. 38–53
‘The legacy of the Crusades’, Pakistan Historical Society Journal 13 (4) (October
1965), pp. 293 ff.
‘The face of the sacred city’, The Listener 74 (30 December 1965), pp. 1068 ff.
[Contribution to] Aldous Huxley: a memorial volume, ed. Julian Huxley (Chatto and
Windus, London/Harper and Row, New York, 1965), pp. 27–9
Review: ‘The Greek Church under the Turks: a review of Timothy Ware, Eustratios
Argenti: a study of the Greek Church under Turkish rule’, Journal of Religious History
3 (4) (December 1965), pp. 347–54
Review: C. Thouzellier, ed., Une Somme anti-cathare: le ‘liber contra Manicheos’
Durand de Huesca, in JEH 16 (1965), pp. 231 ff.
1966
‘The place of Byzantium in the medieval world’ in The Cambridge Medieval History,
vol. 4: The Byzantine Empire, ed. J. M. Hussey (Cambridge University Press,
Cambridge, 1966, 1967), part 2: Government, Church and Civilisation, pp. 355–
75
‘Lucas Notaras, ?�"��! �/ �����=& ’, in P. Wirth, ed., Polychronion. Festschrift
Franz Dolger zum 75. Geburtstag (Carl Winter, Heidelberg, 1966), pp. 447–9
‘Byzantine art and western mediaeval taste’, in Byzantine Art – An European Art:
lectures given on the occasion of the 9th Exhibition of the Council of Europe (Athens,
1966)
‘Byzantine politics’, New Statesman 72 (1966), p. 232
1967
Proceedings of the XIII International Congress of Byzantine Studies, Oxford, 5–10
September 1966, ed. J. M. Hussey, D. Obolensky, S. Runciman (Oxford University
Press, Oxford, 1967)
‘The Church of England and the Orthodox Churches in the seventeenth and eigh-
teenth centuries’, in Anglican Initiative in Christian Unity: lectures delivered at
Lambeth Palace Library 1966, ed. E. G. W. Bill (SPCK, London, 1967), pp. 1–18
Review: J. B. Russell, Dissent and Reform in the Early Middle Ages, in JEH 18 (1967),
pp. 89–90
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