- Tür:
- Kitap Bölümü
- Yazar:
- Angel Nikolov
- Yayın yılı:
- 2025
- Yayıncı:
- Oxford University PressOxford
- Dil:
- en
Abstract The chapter shows that, from a Byzantine perspective, the conversion of the Bulgarian people placed it in spiritual dependence (‘sonship’), which presupposed a kind of political union with the empire. However, Bulgaria was a well-organized and powerful country that did everything possible to defend its sovereignty not only through diplomacy and war, but also by building its own autocephalous church and adopting Slavonic as the language of liturgy and worship. This was a model of selective borrowing from—and adaptation to local demands of—Byzantine political, literary, and cultural norms and patterns, one which was adopted by all Eastern European countries that accepted Byzantine Christianity. Thus, Slavia Orthodoxa was born—a new Christian world that shared the religious and cultural values spread by Constantinople, but remained autonomous and separate from the empire, which is why it was regarded by the Byzantines as barbaric and alien to Roman traditions.
Bu kitabı edinin
ⓘ Bu bağlantılar satış ortaklığı (affiliate) bağlantılarıdır; bir alışveriş yapmanız hâlinde sitemize komisyon kazandırabilir, size ek bir maliyet getirmez.
Bu kitabın anlattığı tarih
Künye/erişim: kaynak bağlantısı
Sıkça sorulan sorular
- Bulgaria—Prime Candidate for Byzantine Commonwealth Membership? ne hakkında?
- Abstract The chapter shows that, from a Byzantine perspective, the conversion of the Bulgarian people placed it in spiritual dependence (‘sonship’), which presupposed a kind of political union with the empire.
- Bulgaria—Prime Candidate for Byzantine Commonwealth Membership? kim tarafından yazıldı?
- Angel Nikolov