Sailing from Byzantium: How a Lost Empire Shaped the World | Wells, Colin | bbb1

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Sailing from Byzantium: How a Lost Empire Shaped the World|Wells, Colin|Delacorte Press|Paperback|Reprint|2007|en|bbb1|Goede Staat:Engelstalige paperback in uitstekende staat, boekranden vertonen lichte gebruikssporen

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Beschrijving

A gripping intellectual adventure story, Sailing from Byzantium sweeps you from the deserts of Arabia to the dark forests of northern Russia, from the colorful towns of Renaissance Italy to the final moments of a millennial city under siege….The story of Byzantium is a real-life adventure of electrifying ideas, high drama, colorful characters, and inspiring feats of daring. In Sailing from Byzantium, Colin Wells tells of the missionaries, mystics, philosophers, and artists who against great odds and often at peril of their own lives spread Greek ideas to the Italians, the Arabs, and the Slavs.Fast-paced, compulsively readable, and filled with fascinating insights, Sailing from Byzantium is one of the great historical dramas-the gripping story of how the flame of civilization was saved and passed on.

Publishers Weekly

In this deft synthesis of scholarship, classicist Wells shows how the Byzantines exerted a profound influence on all neighboring civilizations. Concrete examples still exist that testify to that influence-such as Sant’Apollinare Nuovo in Ravenna, Italy-but this book focuses on the more ineffable products of culture that traveled from the Bosporus, influencing Western, Islamic and Slavic cultures. The story of Renaissance Europe’s embrace of pagan learning is familiar, but Wells tells of a fascinating intellectual circuit that begins with the transmission of Greek learning to the newly powerful Arabs and leads to Averro s’s commentary on Aristotle, Aquinas’s use of this commentary and finally to the Byzantine Cydones’s translation of Aquinas in the 14th century. By then, the dominant Orthodox movement of Hesychasm deemed pagan learning incompatible with Christian faith, forcing many humanists to the Catholic West. Wells devotes much space to the Hesychasts and blames them for this betrayal of Greek heritage and for weakening the empire before its final collapse in 1453, but duly credits them with shaping the Russian Orthodox Church and positioning Moscow as the Third Rome. This volume, which contains a useful glossary of historical figures, detailed maps and a time line, is a superb survey of Byzantium’s many cultural bequests. (July 25) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

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boekranden vertonen lichte gebruikssporen, Engelstalige paperback in uitstekende staat

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