http://www.nybooks.com/articles/17115
Here's a very interesting article for those of you who cannot attend the Byzantine collection at the Metropolitan Museum this summer.
Volume 51, Number 9 · May 27, 2004
Email to a friend
Review
Eastern Glory
By Ingrid D. Rowland
Byzantium: Faith and Power (12611557)
Catalog of the exhibition edited by Helen C. Evans
an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,March 23July 4, 2004.
Metropolitan Museum of Art/Yale University Press, 658 pp., $75.00; $50.00 (paper)
1.
...O sages standing in God's holy fire
As in the gold mosaic of a wall,
Come from the holy fire, perne in a gyre,
And be the singing-masters of my soul.
Consume my heart away; sick with desire
And fastened to a dying animal
It knows not what it is; and gather me
Into the artifice of eternity.
Once out of nature I shall never take
My bodily form from any natural thing,
But such a form as Grecian goldsmiths make
Of hammered gold and gold enamelling
To keep a drowsy Emperor awake;
Or set upon a golden bough to sing
To lords and ladies of Byzantium
Of what is past, or passing, or to come.
William Butler Yeats, from "Sailing to Byzantium"
In 1204, Constantinople, capital of the Eastern Roman Empire for nearly nine hundred years, fell to a band of soldiers bound for Jerusalem on the Fourth Crusade. Theirs was no clash of religions; the Crusaders were Christians from different parts of northern Europe (French, Flemish, Lombard, German, and Venetian) on a mission to preserve the Holy Land for Christianity, at least until they saw the glittering wealth of this New Rome on the Bosporus and its Orthodox Christian rulers. Then greed got the best of piety: the loot was simply more than a warrior horde could resist. After stripping the city bare and torching its library, the Crusaders made cursory attempts to set up a government, but without much conviction; in 1206, they finally sold the plundered city to Venice, which had become a great colonial power in the eastern Mediterranean. But Venice, too, lost interest in governing a city of this size and complexity; by 1261, Constantinople was back in Greek Orthodox hands. So it remained for another two hundred years, until a band of Christian mercenaries conquered it for the Ottoman Turks in 1453.
The new Islamic conquerors smashed the city's most treasured icon, the Virgin Hodegetriathe Way-finder and transformed its greatest church, the sixth-century Hagia Sophia (Divine Wisdom), into a mosque, but on the whole the Ottomans, in Constantinople as elsewhere, preserved more than they destroyed. Thus when a German scholar in 1557 tried to capture the essence of this relentlessly durable, cosmopolitan city, he resorted not to the Roman name that it had worn since the early years of the fourth century, but to its ancient Greek name, Byzantion (in Latin, Byzantium). "Byzantium" it may have been ever since to Western Europeans, but to most of the Orthodox diaspora in the sixteenth century, as in the fifth, and in the twentieth, there has only been Hê Polis"The City," the natural successor to another eternal city, the Urbs Roma.
To this late, cosmopolitan Constantinople of the years between the Fourth Crusade and the Italian Renaissance, the Metropolitan Museum in New York has devoted the third in a series of monumental exhibitions presenting Byzantium to the Far West. The first, "The Age of Spirituality," opened in the fall of 1977 with the moment of transition between the Rome of the Caesars and the Basileia tôn Rhomaiôn, the Greek-speaking political entity that still called itself "Kingdom of the Romans"[1] ; the second exhibition, "The Glory of Byzantium," exactly twenty years later, presented Constantinople by beginning some five hundred years from its refoundation and renaming by the Emperor Constantine in 330, tracing its art through the Crusader conquest of 1204 to the eve of its recovery by its last dynasty, the Palaiologoi.[2] This was the period in which the city flourished as the sole surviving capital of the Roman Empire, as well as the nerve center for Orthodox Christianity.
"Byzantium: Faith and Power" concentrates on the period that has always been seen as presenting the most problems for scholars and museum curators, when the power that gave life to Byzantium was no longer temporal dominion but the power of faith, faith both in the Orthodox tradition and in the city's timeless destiny, a power of persuasion that reaches deep into the Balkans, into that part of northern Russia called Rus', into Coptic Egypt, into Ethiopia, into the Islamic world, and finally, significantly, into the European West, where its influence emerges in Sicily, Naples, and, surprisingly, in sleek, practical Flanders.
This Byzantium is late in coming, influenced by every conqueror and every creed that has passed among its monuments, as unorthodox as any cosmopolitan culture must necessarily be. Yet in our own globalizing world, it is in this late, hybrid, Byzantium of the imagination that we can best recognize ourselvesas William Butler Yeats implicitly understood, for the Byzantium of his famous poem is not the city itself, but its long reach into Italy, whose brilliant mosaics supplied the real substance of his "artifice of eternity." When Yeats wrote of the forms "such...as Grecian goldsmiths make/ Of hammered gold and gold enamelling/To keep a drowsy Emperor awake," he had in mind works that were actually made for popes and lords who had never seen "the holy city of Byzantium" except in their imaginations, wrought by people whose nationality shifted with the demand for their art.
Here's a very interesting article for those of you who cannot attend the Byzantine collection at the Metropolitan Museum this summer.
Volume 51, Number 9 · May 27, 2004
Email to a friend
Review
Eastern Glory
By Ingrid D. Rowland
Byzantium: Faith and Power (12611557)
Catalog of the exhibition edited by Helen C. Evans
an exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York,March 23July 4, 2004.
Metropolitan Museum of Art/Yale University Press, 658 pp., $75.00; $50.00 (paper)
1.
...O sages standing in God's holy fire
As in the gold mosaic of a wall,
Come from the holy fire, perne in a gyre,
And be the singing-masters of my soul.
Consume my heart away; sick with desire
And fastened to a dying animal
It knows not what it is; and gather me
Into the artifice of eternity.
Once out of nature I shall never take
My bodily form from any natural thing,
But such a form as Grecian goldsmiths make
Of hammered gold and gold enamelling
To keep a drowsy Emperor awake;
Or set upon a golden bough to sing
To lords and ladies of Byzantium
Of what is past, or passing, or to come.
William Butler Yeats, from "Sailing to Byzantium"
In 1204, Constantinople, capital of the Eastern Roman Empire for nearly nine hundred years, fell to a band of soldiers bound for Jerusalem on the Fourth Crusade. Theirs was no clash of religions; the Crusaders were Christians from different parts of northern Europe (French, Flemish, Lombard, German, and Venetian) on a mission to preserve the Holy Land for Christianity, at least until they saw the glittering wealth of this New Rome on the Bosporus and its Orthodox Christian rulers. Then greed got the best of piety: the loot was simply more than a warrior horde could resist. After stripping the city bare and torching its library, the Crusaders made cursory attempts to set up a government, but without much conviction; in 1206, they finally sold the plundered city to Venice, which had become a great colonial power in the eastern Mediterranean. But Venice, too, lost interest in governing a city of this size and complexity; by 1261, Constantinople was back in Greek Orthodox hands. So it remained for another two hundred years, until a band of Christian mercenaries conquered it for the Ottoman Turks in 1453.
The new Islamic conquerors smashed the city's most treasured icon, the Virgin Hodegetriathe Way-finder and transformed its greatest church, the sixth-century Hagia Sophia (Divine Wisdom), into a mosque, but on the whole the Ottomans, in Constantinople as elsewhere, preserved more than they destroyed. Thus when a German scholar in 1557 tried to capture the essence of this relentlessly durable, cosmopolitan city, he resorted not to the Roman name that it had worn since the early years of the fourth century, but to its ancient Greek name, Byzantion (in Latin, Byzantium). "Byzantium" it may have been ever since to Western Europeans, but to most of the Orthodox diaspora in the sixteenth century, as in the fifth, and in the twentieth, there has only been Hê Polis"The City," the natural successor to another eternal city, the Urbs Roma.
To this late, cosmopolitan Constantinople of the years between the Fourth Crusade and the Italian Renaissance, the Metropolitan Museum in New York has devoted the third in a series of monumental exhibitions presenting Byzantium to the Far West. The first, "The Age of Spirituality," opened in the fall of 1977 with the moment of transition between the Rome of the Caesars and the Basileia tôn Rhomaiôn, the Greek-speaking political entity that still called itself "Kingdom of the Romans"[1] ; the second exhibition, "The Glory of Byzantium," exactly twenty years later, presented Constantinople by beginning some five hundred years from its refoundation and renaming by the Emperor Constantine in 330, tracing its art through the Crusader conquest of 1204 to the eve of its recovery by its last dynasty, the Palaiologoi.[2] This was the period in which the city flourished as the sole surviving capital of the Roman Empire, as well as the nerve center for Orthodox Christianity.
"Byzantium: Faith and Power" concentrates on the period that has always been seen as presenting the most problems for scholars and museum curators, when the power that gave life to Byzantium was no longer temporal dominion but the power of faith, faith both in the Orthodox tradition and in the city's timeless destiny, a power of persuasion that reaches deep into the Balkans, into that part of northern Russia called Rus', into Coptic Egypt, into Ethiopia, into the Islamic world, and finally, significantly, into the European West, where its influence emerges in Sicily, Naples, and, surprisingly, in sleek, practical Flanders.
This Byzantium is late in coming, influenced by every conqueror and every creed that has passed among its monuments, as unorthodox as any cosmopolitan culture must necessarily be. Yet in our own globalizing world, it is in this late, hybrid, Byzantium of the imagination that we can best recognize ourselvesas William Butler Yeats implicitly understood, for the Byzantium of his famous poem is not the city itself, but its long reach into Italy, whose brilliant mosaics supplied the real substance of his "artifice of eternity." When Yeats wrote of the forms "such...as Grecian goldsmiths make/ Of hammered gold and gold enamelling/To keep a drowsy Emperor awake," he had in mind works that were actually made for popes and lords who had never seen "the holy city of Byzantium" except in their imaginations, wrought by people whose nationality shifted with the demand for their art.