Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History,Mentalities, Institutions - I

The patriarchal decree validating the establishment of the Wallachian archdiocese in 1359; a series of documents pertaining to the early history of the Koutloumousiou monastery on Mount Athos; the surviving redactions of Patriarch Niphon II's lost vita; the proceedings of the interrogation of a...

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Main Author: Nikos Panou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Institute for Neohellenic Research 2007-01-01
Series:Historical Review
Online Access:https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/historicalReview/article/view/3981
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spelling doaj-613f02b7f20643b4a605c5b5975794a92020-11-24T21:51:00ZengInstitute for Neohellenic Research Historical Review1790-35721791-76032007-01-01307111010.12681/hr.1993331Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History,Mentalities, Institutions - INikos Panou0Harvard UniversityThe patriarchal decree validating the establishment of the Wallachian archdiocese in 1359; a series of documents pertaining to the early history of the Koutloumousiou monastery on Mount Athos; the surviving redactions of Patriarch Niphon II's lost vita; the proceedings of the interrogation of a Greek priest arrested by the Polish authorities on charges of conspiracy and espionage; and an emphatically digressive section in Matthew of Myra's verse chronicle known as History of Wallachia. This article, of which the first part is presently published, offers a discussion of these textual materials - which span four crucial centuries of Balkan history and represent an intriguing variety of discursive practices and traditions. It aims to contribute to a deeper understanding of the intricate mechanisms that generated a climate of toleration, mobility and inter-ethnic contact in the Ottoman Balkans, enabling a symbiotic relationship between Greeks and Romanians, which found its vital space in the semi-autonomous and strategically located Danubian principalities, and endured throughout the early modern period despite having been severely undermined by opposing tendencies and conflicting interests. The two sections at hand focus on the Bishop of Myra's pivotal text, as well as on written records related to the early, and yet formative, contacts between the nascent Romanian states and the late Byzantine Empire; in the two remaining sections, which will appear in the next volume of The Historical Review, this endeavour will be brought to a conclusion by means of a (necessarily selective) presentation of evidence dating from the period after the fall of Constantinople and up to the beginning of the seventeenth century.https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/historicalReview/article/view/3981
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nikos Panou
spellingShingle Nikos Panou
Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History,Mentalities, Institutions - I
Historical Review
author_facet Nikos Panou
author_sort Nikos Panou
title Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History,Mentalities, Institutions - I
title_short Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History,Mentalities, Institutions - I
title_full Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History,Mentalities, Institutions - I
title_fullStr Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History,Mentalities, Institutions - I
title_full_unstemmed Greek-Romanian Symbiotic Patterns in the Early Modern Period: History,Mentalities, Institutions - I
title_sort greek-romanian symbiotic patterns in the early modern period: history,mentalities, institutions - i
publisher Institute for Neohellenic Research
series Historical Review
issn 1790-3572
1791-7603
publishDate 2007-01-01
description The patriarchal decree validating the establishment of the Wallachian archdiocese in 1359; a series of documents pertaining to the early history of the Koutloumousiou monastery on Mount Athos; the surviving redactions of Patriarch Niphon II's lost vita; the proceedings of the interrogation of a Greek priest arrested by the Polish authorities on charges of conspiracy and espionage; and an emphatically digressive section in Matthew of Myra's verse chronicle known as History of Wallachia. This article, of which the first part is presently published, offers a discussion of these textual materials - which span four crucial centuries of Balkan history and represent an intriguing variety of discursive practices and traditions. It aims to contribute to a deeper understanding of the intricate mechanisms that generated a climate of toleration, mobility and inter-ethnic contact in the Ottoman Balkans, enabling a symbiotic relationship between Greeks and Romanians, which found its vital space in the semi-autonomous and strategically located Danubian principalities, and endured throughout the early modern period despite having been severely undermined by opposing tendencies and conflicting interests. The two sections at hand focus on the Bishop of Myra's pivotal text, as well as on written records related to the early, and yet formative, contacts between the nascent Romanian states and the late Byzantine Empire; in the two remaining sections, which will appear in the next volume of The Historical Review, this endeavour will be brought to a conclusion by means of a (necessarily selective) presentation of evidence dating from the period after the fall of Constantinople and up to the beginning of the seventeenth century.
url https://ejournals.epublishing.ekt.gr/index.php/historicalReview/article/view/3981
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