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Three Political Voices from the Age of Justinian: Agapetus - Advice to the Emperor, Dialogue on Political Science, Paul the Silentiary - Description of Hagia Sophia
The Diary of Elizabeth Lee: Growing up on Merseyside in the Late Nineteenth Century spacer

Synopsis
This one-volume translation, with commentary and introduction brings together three important works.

All three texts cast great, if generally neglected light on politics and ideology in early Byzantium. Agapetus wrote, c. 527-30CE, from a position sympathetic to Justinian, when he had still to consolidate his authority. He sets out what an emperor must do to acquire legitimacy, in terms of governments being the imitation of God. Read in context, his work is much more than a list of pious commonplaces.

The Dialogue, written anonymously towards the end the same reign, comprises fragments from Books 4-5 of a philosophically sophisticated (lost) longer work, setting out requirements for the ideal polity, based on a similar concept of imperial rule, with extensive comment on matters of current political salience but from an implicitly hostile standpoint. Not only does the text reflect the nature of Neoplatonic political philosophy but it also penetrates with its ideas deep into the inner realities of the time, into the political problems of Constantinople during the first half of the sixth century.

The third text was written by Paul the Silientiary to mark the rededication of the basilica Hagia Sophia, built thirty years earlier under the orders of Emperor Justinian I.

Together the translations provide an important insight into the early Byzantine period.

Translated Texts for Historians 52

256pp., Paperback

Publishing December 2009

 

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