Tivadar Vida, Dieter Quast, Zsófia Rácz & István Koncz (eds.), Kollaps - Neuordnung - Kontinuität. Gepiden nach dem Ungtergang des Hunnenreiches. Tagung der Internationalen Konferenz and der Eötvös Loránd Universität, Budapest, 14. - 15. Dezember 2015., Budapest, 2019
The paper is aimed at presenting and discussing anew the textual and archaeological evidence pert... more The paper is aimed at presenting and discussing anew the textual and archaeological evidence pertaining to the presence of Gepids in southern Pannonia during much of the sixth century. The intention is to re-examine available sources, redress current interpretations and provide new insights. The first focus is on the military and diplomatic affairs that are reconstructed based mainly on the contemporary narratives, bearing in mind their complex nature as products of specific sociopolitical, ideological and cultural contexts. Building upon what can be discerned from the literary sources, it is argued that the Gepids pursued a consistent policy with a goal to establish and maintain themselves as a recognized regional power and make possible for their ruling elite to acquire benefits and concessions from the Empire same as any other group that had settled in Roman territory. The second focus is on the material evidence that might provide glimpses into how the Gepids tried to organize the life in the former Roman province and what the living conditions were for Roman and non-Roman populations, as well as help define the spatial extent of the Gepids' domain in southern Pannonia.
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Both the Roman and Frankish sources that provide the information about the War of the Batos and the War against Liudewit, which are under scrutiny here, each look at these respective events from their own timelines and their own perspectives as undisputed sovereigns who, by their domination, guarantee peaceful state of affairs and general prosperity, therefore presenting any attempt to change the existing circumstances as blow to the right order of things. Their colonial discourse is rather obvious. Even when they seem to emphasize the virtues of their adversaries (regularly those are military virtues), or the difficulties associated with warfare against rebels and initial concerns, they do so to extol their own success.
At the narrative level, the dependence of Frankish authors on Roman literary patterns can be seen in the formation of narratives, which, in line with genre restrictions, is reflected in the borrowing of syntagms and conceptual sets. Whether or not there is also at work a more direct reliance by Frankish authors on their Roman counterparts in relation to geopolitical considerations (the coincidence of the area of the events) is difficult to say with certainty, but the analysis conducted here seems to indicate that Frankish authors were certainly aware of this. The strong personalisation of the Carolingian-age war in southern Pannonia - besides being more in tune with the spirit of the era since it was about a vassal who rose against his lord - may have also been due to the fact that a not sufficiently specific mention of the Pannonian war in the context of the time might lead readers to think that the area north of the river Drava was affected as well, the entire limes Pannonicus (ARF, a. 826). A debt to Roman models, in a way, is additionally paid here with the reference to the „Pannonian expedition“ (expeditio Pannonica, ARF, a. 821). It is certainly clear from the Frankish records that Ljudevit's uprising was the single most dramatic event in the history of the Carolingian dominance in the Danube-Adriatic area, which must have served as an additional trigger for Frankish authors to have before their eyes, as both a literary model and a political forerunner, the War of the Batos that the Romans themselves called their most serious conflict since the Punic Wars.
In the end, the epilogue and lesson of the story of both the Roman and Frankish accounts are, mutatis mutandis, identical and correspond to ideological posits of either empires: in both cases the rebels were defeated, their leaders justifiably punished, and the empires gained deserved triumphs. Anything less could (or should) have been hardly expected.
sources are in the main focus for the analysis, while, at the same time, their randomness and tendency are borne in mind. The observations derived from written sources are attempted to be meaningfully linked to available archaeological record. The analysis is also focused on the question of economic potential of various economic actors, regional communities, local landowners, the Church and state authorities, i.e. the share of central government in managing, maintaining and revival of provincial economy. Attention is also paid to the economic situation in the provinces under the non-Roman rule.
During the fourth century Western Illyricum was an area of lively economic activity that was largely oriented to meet state needs. Written sources testify to certain products that had a supraregional character, but one may conclude that the Norican textiles were the only product that was of greater importance in broad-range and long-distance trade. In written sources Pannonia is singled out as a province rich both in agricultural products and in merchandise, but these were primarily consumed locally. Next to cities and towns, the biggest consumer was the army. The raw materials were also of supraregional importance, especially the iron from Dalmatia and Noricum as well as the stone material. The Norican marble was still quarried in the fourth century and transported to Pannonia and Italy as well. Moreover, the Dalmatian stone was one of the more sought-after items from the fourth to sixth centuries, both as a raw material and as a finished product. One of the most important products which was based on a locally accessible raw material was coinage. Western provinces were at a time supplied to a large degree with coins of the Siscia mint. Of course, it should be borne in mind that regionally mined monetary metals weren’t only used to fulfill the capacities of local mints. Locally available wood and stone materials were also important as a building material and especially used in the extensive works to strengthen the Danube frontier by restoration and construction of forts in the second half of the fourth century. To a certain extent this is also true for later times, the fifth and sixth centuries, considering the erection of hillforts in the interior of Dalmatia and in Noricum, as well as in strategic positions along the eastern Adriatic coast and on the islands. It could be argued that one of the greatest resources of the late Roman Western Illyricum, and particularly Pannonia which is singled out for it in written sources, were its people. This refers to lesser extent to slaves who are likely to have been acquired in frequent conflicts along the frontier as well as in military campaigns across the border during the fourth century. The area of Illyricum was well-known in the later Roman Empire as a recruiting ground, which continued even after a significant part of Western Illyricum was already dominated by barbarian groups. The large size of population, if judged by what is claimed in written sources, was likely to have been a good basis for general internal consumption, which is why the western Illyrian provinces were also major importers of goods, even the goods that were produced locally, such as wine and olive oil in Dalmatia. In addition, demand for luxury products and better quality goods has also to be taken into account. That is why high-quality olive oil from the Zadar area could be exported to Italy despite the local deficit of this product in Dalmatia. The quality of raw material as well as the skillful manufacturing and workmanship of the art product itself were the reason why the sarcophagi of the Salona-Brač workshops were still in demand in the sixth-century Italy.
The production capabilities and the volume of import were also influenced by general military and demographic circumstances. The exposure of the Danube areas, the collapse of the Danube frontier and frequent wars and campaigns had an extremely adverse effect on the demographic condition throughout this period both due to violent deaths and capture as well as displacement of people, to which losses caused by the epidemics such as the bubonic plague in the mid-sixth century have to be added. Even if the image of Pannonia devoid of people as portraited by the sixth century written sources is exaggerated, there is no doubt that the number of inhabitants decreased significantly in comparison to the fourth century. This great demographic decline contributed, much more than the other factors, to the far-reaching
deterioration of the urban structures and disappearance of cities and towns, which, along with the permanent withdrawal of the Roman army, inflicted an irreparable blow to the economy as production capabilities and demand were greatly reduced. To be sure, at least until the mid-fifth century Pannonia still imported the goods, but to what degree the political instability had an affect is shown by the example of Valeria where the import of African pottery was discontinued in the early fifth century as the province came under the control of the Hun groups. On the other hand, the limited possibilities of import could encourage the local production. Regardless of the fact that the new rulers such as the Ostrogoths were very keen in preserving the late Roman traditions, little could be done for the more lasting recovery of at least some Pannonian regions.
The vitality was preserved in Dalmatia, especially in its coastal area, for a long period, and, to a certain extent, in Noricum for much of the fifth century. At certain periods Dalmatia even experienced more positive demographic impacts due to the population influx from the more endangered regions. The relative economic strength of Dalmatia was supported with the efforts of the state authorities (the Ostrogothic
ones perhaps even more than the Eastern Roman ones) as well as the needs of the Church. It is worth pointing out that the war between Ostrogoths and Eastern Romans surely gave a boost to the Dalmatian economy since Salona became a permanent military base, and the stay of the imperial army spurred an increasing demand for raw materials and products due to logistics needs. The province’s relative prosperity is also indicated by a demand for luxury goods and the import of products from the eastern and southern Mediterranean. Favorable circumstances lasted until the last decade of the sixth century, which saw new overwhelming challenges to the late antique economy in Dalmatia that ultimately crushed the previous growth.
literary and political contexts and underlying ideologies that are present in the selected letters.
extent, the basic hypothesis being that both types of sources, written as well as the material ones, have the force of argument when it comes to determining the content and form of ethnic identity.
Even though it may seem so at the first glance, written sources do not have absolute advantage when it comes to offering clues about ethnic identity, although they should by no means be neglected in favour of archaeological analysis. The solution is to achieve a synergy of all available sources, both written and archaeological.
The researcher must be aware of the limitations that both types of sources impose, especially concerning the area between River Drava and the Adriatic. Despite its indubitable value, the historical narrative based on the existing written sources, unless there is no prospect of finding a new one, can offer only a partial answer to the research question, even with a methodologically innovative analysis. The key therefore lies in archaeology, in fresh, systematic, and methodologically guided research that will ensure a far broader objective base and lead to more positive and better grounded insights in order to define more reliably the contexts that are necessary for an accurate interpretation. Archaeological sources should not be used to draw conclusions on social, cultural, or religious identity function alone, since it is also valid regarding ethnicity. What is needed is to adopt a more nuanced approach, devoid of all generalization or automatism.
So far, it can be said that, in most cases, ethnic identity groups mentioned in the written sources for southern Pannonia and Dalmatia cannot be identified with precision in archaeological sources, although it may sometimes seem otherwise, which has occasionally led to overgeneralized interpretations and far-reaching historical reconstructions. The interpreted written sources indicate that there
were local Romanic groups living in southern Dalmatia and Pannonia during the first half of the 6th century, which external observers could identify on the provincial level (as Pannonians), on the basis of an urban entity raised to the regional level (as Siscians), or according to the cultural-political key (as Romans). Besides those, the sources also mention various barbaric ethnic identity groups, the most prominent among them being the (Ostro-)Goths, the Gepids, the Langobards,
the Suevians, and the Herules. At the same time, the available written sources prove to be less useful when it comes to the precise location of these groups, their numbers, the material aspect of their identity, their organization and quality of life, the socio-cultural features of their communities, or their interethnic relations. Only some future archaeological research may possibly offer some answers
to these and similar questions.
and Split) by Split’s Archdeacon Thomas (1200-1268). The main aim is not to give a historical interpretation and clarification of the data, but to analyse the method in which Archdeacon Thomas constructs his narrative, the terminology which is used in
connection with the Crusades, as a base for his motivation in describing individual events and how much they, in his account, comply with other Crusade chroniclers of the era. The intention is to determine to which extent Thomas was imbued with the
ideas of the Crusaders and how he perceived it. The analysis also includes Thomas’s attitude towards the military order of the Knights Templar, whose formation was the reflection of the Crusader spirit of the Church in the West."
Key words: John of Palisna, biography, primary source evidence, historiography, the Late Middle Ages
Even a glance at the Roman traffic routes recorded in literary sources and established on the ground clearly shows the development of the Roman traffic system in South Pannonia and its functionality in the late antique period. Along with three road axes, the Podravian, the Posavian and the Danubian (the limes) roads, the regional, inner road (via mediterranea) was of paramount importance. No less important were the vicinal roads that connected larger settlements, such as the routes from Marsonia to Certis<i>a or from Aquae Iasae to Iovia Botivum, cut short the lenght of some routes, such as the Posavian road that had an alternative, more straight link to Siscia through modern Turopolje, or directly connected major road links, for example the Aqua Viva-Pir-Andautonia-Siscia and the Bononia-Sirmium roads. These main and principal routes were complemented by a series of minor and secondary roads, which made practically the entire Sava-Drava-Danube interamnium interwoven with road network. Further on-the-ground research should additionally elucidate the courses of already established routes and certainly bring new traffic links to light, especially when it comes to junction towns such as Aquae Iasae, Aquae Balissae and Certis<i>a. Finally, the proposed identification of road stations does not exhaust in any way the possibility of varying hypotheses, particularly with regard to data scarcity and uncertainty of itinerary and other sources, and the fact that the creation of a thorough archaeological picture is still in many ways ahead.
Key words: Roman roads, road stations, South Panonia, late antiquity
Both the Roman and Frankish sources that provide the information about the War of the Batos and the War against Liudewit, which are under scrutiny here, each look at these respective events from their own timelines and their own perspectives as undisputed sovereigns who, by their domination, guarantee peaceful state of affairs and general prosperity, therefore presenting any attempt to change the existing circumstances as blow to the right order of things. Their colonial discourse is rather obvious. Even when they seem to emphasize the virtues of their adversaries (regularly those are military virtues), or the difficulties associated with warfare against rebels and initial concerns, they do so to extol their own success.
At the narrative level, the dependence of Frankish authors on Roman literary patterns can be seen in the formation of narratives, which, in line with genre restrictions, is reflected in the borrowing of syntagms and conceptual sets. Whether or not there is also at work a more direct reliance by Frankish authors on their Roman counterparts in relation to geopolitical considerations (the coincidence of the area of the events) is difficult to say with certainty, but the analysis conducted here seems to indicate that Frankish authors were certainly aware of this. The strong personalisation of the Carolingian-age war in southern Pannonia - besides being more in tune with the spirit of the era since it was about a vassal who rose against his lord - may have also been due to the fact that a not sufficiently specific mention of the Pannonian war in the context of the time might lead readers to think that the area north of the river Drava was affected as well, the entire limes Pannonicus (ARF, a. 826). A debt to Roman models, in a way, is additionally paid here with the reference to the „Pannonian expedition“ (expeditio Pannonica, ARF, a. 821). It is certainly clear from the Frankish records that Ljudevit's uprising was the single most dramatic event in the history of the Carolingian dominance in the Danube-Adriatic area, which must have served as an additional trigger for Frankish authors to have before their eyes, as both a literary model and a political forerunner, the War of the Batos that the Romans themselves called their most serious conflict since the Punic Wars.
In the end, the epilogue and lesson of the story of both the Roman and Frankish accounts are, mutatis mutandis, identical and correspond to ideological posits of either empires: in both cases the rebels were defeated, their leaders justifiably punished, and the empires gained deserved triumphs. Anything less could (or should) have been hardly expected.
sources are in the main focus for the analysis, while, at the same time, their randomness and tendency are borne in mind. The observations derived from written sources are attempted to be meaningfully linked to available archaeological record. The analysis is also focused on the question of economic potential of various economic actors, regional communities, local landowners, the Church and state authorities, i.e. the share of central government in managing, maintaining and revival of provincial economy. Attention is also paid to the economic situation in the provinces under the non-Roman rule.
During the fourth century Western Illyricum was an area of lively economic activity that was largely oriented to meet state needs. Written sources testify to certain products that had a supraregional character, but one may conclude that the Norican textiles were the only product that was of greater importance in broad-range and long-distance trade. In written sources Pannonia is singled out as a province rich both in agricultural products and in merchandise, but these were primarily consumed locally. Next to cities and towns, the biggest consumer was the army. The raw materials were also of supraregional importance, especially the iron from Dalmatia and Noricum as well as the stone material. The Norican marble was still quarried in the fourth century and transported to Pannonia and Italy as well. Moreover, the Dalmatian stone was one of the more sought-after items from the fourth to sixth centuries, both as a raw material and as a finished product. One of the most important products which was based on a locally accessible raw material was coinage. Western provinces were at a time supplied to a large degree with coins of the Siscia mint. Of course, it should be borne in mind that regionally mined monetary metals weren’t only used to fulfill the capacities of local mints. Locally available wood and stone materials were also important as a building material and especially used in the extensive works to strengthen the Danube frontier by restoration and construction of forts in the second half of the fourth century. To a certain extent this is also true for later times, the fifth and sixth centuries, considering the erection of hillforts in the interior of Dalmatia and in Noricum, as well as in strategic positions along the eastern Adriatic coast and on the islands. It could be argued that one of the greatest resources of the late Roman Western Illyricum, and particularly Pannonia which is singled out for it in written sources, were its people. This refers to lesser extent to slaves who are likely to have been acquired in frequent conflicts along the frontier as well as in military campaigns across the border during the fourth century. The area of Illyricum was well-known in the later Roman Empire as a recruiting ground, which continued even after a significant part of Western Illyricum was already dominated by barbarian groups. The large size of population, if judged by what is claimed in written sources, was likely to have been a good basis for general internal consumption, which is why the western Illyrian provinces were also major importers of goods, even the goods that were produced locally, such as wine and olive oil in Dalmatia. In addition, demand for luxury products and better quality goods has also to be taken into account. That is why high-quality olive oil from the Zadar area could be exported to Italy despite the local deficit of this product in Dalmatia. The quality of raw material as well as the skillful manufacturing and workmanship of the art product itself were the reason why the sarcophagi of the Salona-Brač workshops were still in demand in the sixth-century Italy.
The production capabilities and the volume of import were also influenced by general military and demographic circumstances. The exposure of the Danube areas, the collapse of the Danube frontier and frequent wars and campaigns had an extremely adverse effect on the demographic condition throughout this period both due to violent deaths and capture as well as displacement of people, to which losses caused by the epidemics such as the bubonic plague in the mid-sixth century have to be added. Even if the image of Pannonia devoid of people as portraited by the sixth century written sources is exaggerated, there is no doubt that the number of inhabitants decreased significantly in comparison to the fourth century. This great demographic decline contributed, much more than the other factors, to the far-reaching
deterioration of the urban structures and disappearance of cities and towns, which, along with the permanent withdrawal of the Roman army, inflicted an irreparable blow to the economy as production capabilities and demand were greatly reduced. To be sure, at least until the mid-fifth century Pannonia still imported the goods, but to what degree the political instability had an affect is shown by the example of Valeria where the import of African pottery was discontinued in the early fifth century as the province came under the control of the Hun groups. On the other hand, the limited possibilities of import could encourage the local production. Regardless of the fact that the new rulers such as the Ostrogoths were very keen in preserving the late Roman traditions, little could be done for the more lasting recovery of at least some Pannonian regions.
The vitality was preserved in Dalmatia, especially in its coastal area, for a long period, and, to a certain extent, in Noricum for much of the fifth century. At certain periods Dalmatia even experienced more positive demographic impacts due to the population influx from the more endangered regions. The relative economic strength of Dalmatia was supported with the efforts of the state authorities (the Ostrogothic
ones perhaps even more than the Eastern Roman ones) as well as the needs of the Church. It is worth pointing out that the war between Ostrogoths and Eastern Romans surely gave a boost to the Dalmatian economy since Salona became a permanent military base, and the stay of the imperial army spurred an increasing demand for raw materials and products due to logistics needs. The province’s relative prosperity is also indicated by a demand for luxury goods and the import of products from the eastern and southern Mediterranean. Favorable circumstances lasted until the last decade of the sixth century, which saw new overwhelming challenges to the late antique economy in Dalmatia that ultimately crushed the previous growth.
literary and political contexts and underlying ideologies that are present in the selected letters.
extent, the basic hypothesis being that both types of sources, written as well as the material ones, have the force of argument when it comes to determining the content and form of ethnic identity.
Even though it may seem so at the first glance, written sources do not have absolute advantage when it comes to offering clues about ethnic identity, although they should by no means be neglected in favour of archaeological analysis. The solution is to achieve a synergy of all available sources, both written and archaeological.
The researcher must be aware of the limitations that both types of sources impose, especially concerning the area between River Drava and the Adriatic. Despite its indubitable value, the historical narrative based on the existing written sources, unless there is no prospect of finding a new one, can offer only a partial answer to the research question, even with a methodologically innovative analysis. The key therefore lies in archaeology, in fresh, systematic, and methodologically guided research that will ensure a far broader objective base and lead to more positive and better grounded insights in order to define more reliably the contexts that are necessary for an accurate interpretation. Archaeological sources should not be used to draw conclusions on social, cultural, or religious identity function alone, since it is also valid regarding ethnicity. What is needed is to adopt a more nuanced approach, devoid of all generalization or automatism.
So far, it can be said that, in most cases, ethnic identity groups mentioned in the written sources for southern Pannonia and Dalmatia cannot be identified with precision in archaeological sources, although it may sometimes seem otherwise, which has occasionally led to overgeneralized interpretations and far-reaching historical reconstructions. The interpreted written sources indicate that there
were local Romanic groups living in southern Dalmatia and Pannonia during the first half of the 6th century, which external observers could identify on the provincial level (as Pannonians), on the basis of an urban entity raised to the regional level (as Siscians), or according to the cultural-political key (as Romans). Besides those, the sources also mention various barbaric ethnic identity groups, the most prominent among them being the (Ostro-)Goths, the Gepids, the Langobards,
the Suevians, and the Herules. At the same time, the available written sources prove to be less useful when it comes to the precise location of these groups, their numbers, the material aspect of their identity, their organization and quality of life, the socio-cultural features of their communities, or their interethnic relations. Only some future archaeological research may possibly offer some answers
to these and similar questions.
and Split) by Split’s Archdeacon Thomas (1200-1268). The main aim is not to give a historical interpretation and clarification of the data, but to analyse the method in which Archdeacon Thomas constructs his narrative, the terminology which is used in
connection with the Crusades, as a base for his motivation in describing individual events and how much they, in his account, comply with other Crusade chroniclers of the era. The intention is to determine to which extent Thomas was imbued with the
ideas of the Crusaders and how he perceived it. The analysis also includes Thomas’s attitude towards the military order of the Knights Templar, whose formation was the reflection of the Crusader spirit of the Church in the West."
Key words: John of Palisna, biography, primary source evidence, historiography, the Late Middle Ages
Even a glance at the Roman traffic routes recorded in literary sources and established on the ground clearly shows the development of the Roman traffic system in South Pannonia and its functionality in the late antique period. Along with three road axes, the Podravian, the Posavian and the Danubian (the limes) roads, the regional, inner road (via mediterranea) was of paramount importance. No less important were the vicinal roads that connected larger settlements, such as the routes from Marsonia to Certis<i>a or from Aquae Iasae to Iovia Botivum, cut short the lenght of some routes, such as the Posavian road that had an alternative, more straight link to Siscia through modern Turopolje, or directly connected major road links, for example the Aqua Viva-Pir-Andautonia-Siscia and the Bononia-Sirmium roads. These main and principal routes were complemented by a series of minor and secondary roads, which made practically the entire Sava-Drava-Danube interamnium interwoven with road network. Further on-the-ground research should additionally elucidate the courses of already established routes and certainly bring new traffic links to light, especially when it comes to junction towns such as Aquae Iasae, Aquae Balissae and Certis<i>a. Finally, the proposed identification of road stations does not exhaust in any way the possibility of varying hypotheses, particularly with regard to data scarcity and uncertainty of itinerary and other sources, and the fact that the creation of a thorough archaeological picture is still in many ways ahead.
Key words: Roman roads, road stations, South Panonia, late antiquity
The analyzed narrative sources offer too few information that is directly related to forests in the region between the Sava and Drava rivers. The exception is Claudian who makes the only explicit mention of forests in the region, and apparently in its eastern part, the former Roman province of Second Pannonia (Pannonia Secunda). However, given the panegyric character of his poem, his description has primarily symbolic power and is also quite general. On the contrary, Sextus Aurelius Victor was for a while governor of the Second Pannonia, and his remark about immense forests of Pannonias carries a greater weight as an eyewitness account. Even if the information about the clearfelling at the behest of Emperor Galerius has nothing to do with the region between the Sava and Drava rivers, it is easy to imagine that the Aurelius Victor gained the impression of the vastness of the Pannonian forests precisely during his governorship in southern Pannonia. All remaining narative sources that have been analyzed, Latin or Greek, late antique or medieval, provide only indirect evidence on forests in the region between the Sava and Drava rivers (to be sure, Priskos and the Deeds of the Hungarians mention forests, but their refer to areas south, i.e. east of the region in question). Here the emphasis is primarily on the geographic characteristics of the space that are associated with woodland, hilltops (Zosimos, the Royal Frankish Annals, Constantine Porphyrogenitus) and marshy area (Ennodius, Zosimos, indirectly the Royal Frankish Annals), i.e. on the use of wood for making palisades, bridges and boats (Zosimos, Priskos, Menander the Guardsman, Albert of Aachen, William of Tyre, John Kinnamos). Hunting as a forest-specific activity is mentioned incidentally by Priskos, but not in the connection to the region between the Sava and Drava nor southern Pannonia in general. Apart from Aurelius Victor, John Kinnamos is the only among the analyzed authors who visited southern Pannonia, albeit its eastern edge, where he participated in the siege of Zemun which was undertaken by Emperor Manuel I Komnenos in 1165. Finally, links between individual descriptions and remarks could not be established.
Whereas the evidence from narrative sources is rather sparse, richer material, with more concrete information, is offered by late medieval charters on purchase, sale, exchange, pawning, donation and perambulation of estates. Regardless of limitations and scantiness in certain aspects, it is possible to establish, based on the available information, in which ways the forest was integrated in the late medieval everyday life, and partly reconstruct both the forest cover and the tree species that grew in the region. For the medieval man, the forest was a source of food (forest fruits, game), the forest also feeds domestic animals, provides building materials, secures means for defense/attack and firewood, and therefore it is a source of profit, both directly and indirectly. The forest is also a source of danger, because of wild animals, robbers and various other individuals. Lawsuits were often conducted due to „forest incidents“. People were summoned to court because of the unauthorized harvesting of acorn and/or pig feeding in the acorn forests, dispersing and pilfering piglets from the forest, cutting and stealing wood from the forest, burning and falling down border trees, removing border markings, robberies and murders.
The extant information from charters, in spite of their deficiencies, constitute a solid basis for exploration of various economic and linguistic processes, as well as environmental change processes. It is necessary to approach interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary to the research of forests in the region between the Sava and Drava rivers. To being, the evidence extracted from written sources should be linked to the information that has been obtained by archaeological investigations, which would provide a more reliable picture about forest areas in the region between the Sava and Drava rivers, even for periods where there are no written testimonies.
It will be contended that the Frankish thrust into the Middle Danube area may have served several major purposes. In addition to securing the eastern frontier of the Frankish realm, this expansionist move against the Avar Khaganate was likely aimed at strengthening the Frankish position in the wider region given the deteriorating relations with the Byzantines; furthermore, should Charlemagne and his advisors be allowed to have enjoyed a well-informed insight into the situation in the Southeast Europe, the attack against the Avars may also be seen as a sort of a pre-emptive step to forestall any similar possible action either by the Byzantines or by the Bulgars at any point in the future; moreover, it brought a large portion of the territory that had once belonged to the Roman Empire under the Frankish sway thus giving more substance to Charlemagne's claim at the renovatio Imperii Romani; and finally, it gave the Franks the opportunity to deepen and intensify their policy towards the regional Slavic groups, which was the more important since the good relations with the Slavs proved of some value in repeated attempts by the Franks to pacify the Saxons, and the Franks might have expected the same support from the Middle Danubian and Adriatic Slavs against the Byzantium.
The provisions of the Treaty of Aachen presumably also affected the region between the rivers Sava, Drava, and Danube which, by that time, had been verly likely already organized in the Principality of Lower Pannonia, although the sources are silent on this. It may even be that the Frankish authority in this region was now if not officially, but at least tacitly recognized by the Byzantines. However, it would seem that the rebellion of the dux Liudevit provided them on surface with a chance to challenge the Frankish dominance. The course and details of the rebellion warrant re-examination in this context, especially in light of the fact that Constantine Porphyrogenitus attributed to the Byzantine Emperor Michael II (820-829), a contemporary of the rebellion, the responsibility for the total collapse of the Byzantine influence on the East Adriatic coast and in Slavic lands of the western Balkans.
character. Starting from the fact that the Pope obviously saw the necessity to impose the „Latin matrix“ at the 925 synod of Split, the paper analyses the manner in which the Methodii doctrina and the life of the ecclesiastical structures of the Slavonic liturgical language in the territories of Dalmatia in the tenth century might have differed from the mentioned matrix and contends that these differences were a result of the Byzantine missionary activity.
Justinian for their own respective accounts of the past, see what interested them most and determine the possible reasons why they included or excluded certain type of information. With regard to that, it is also explored if and to what extent the later writers simply took the
information verbatim from the earlier writers, only perpetuating the image already created by their predecessor(s).
The earliest testimony about the witch-hunts in Croatian lands comes from the mid-14th century, that is, the 1360 trial which took place in Zagreb’s Gradec. That was just the beginning in northern Croatia because there were further Gradec trials, although mostly at several-year intervals. The Adriatic coast was quite the opposite. Regardless of legal provisions in statutes which clearly indicate that city and municipal authorities bore in mind the possibility of investigating and punishing warlocks and witches, for now we only know about one case of witch-hunt in the eastern Adriatic in the Middle Ages, the one in Šibenik in 1443. It was led by the Venetian Inquisition, whose authority spread
to these parts in the first decades of the 15th century, when the Venetians took control over the most part of the eastern Adriatic coast from Istria to Kotor, except Dubrovnik and the coast from Rječina to Zrmanja and Senj. Besides, there is barely any information about witch trials even in the early modern period. Admittedly, many official records are lost, detailed records were not kept in all cities, and even the collected material has not been fully examined. The Venetian Inquisition also handled several cases in Istria, the last one being in 1632 in Svetvinčenat. Along with the cases in 1625 and 1626, Kastav was the site of a massive witch-hunt in 1716, with a death toll of 14, seven men and seven women. In Venice itself twelve proceedings were conducted
against Croatians from Kvarner and Dalmatia, most of whom were permanently or temporarily settled in the capital city of the Republic of Venice. Most of the cases date from the 17th century, some are from the 16th and 18th century, and the accused were mainly women. We know about three trials in Dubrovnik, 1556/1558, 1660 and 1689-1690, with one accused woman in each trial. Much more massive witch-hunts were launched in today’s northern Croatia, to be more exact, its northwestern part, because it was not until the late 17th century that the eastern parts were taken back from the Ottomans. However, even after this, today’s Slavonia was barely affected by those events. The spread of witch-hunts
was put to a stop due to the more pressing matters, such as the fact that extensive Croatian lands were under the Ottoman power for a long time, and that the coastal area and the hinterland found themselves tormented by wars among the forces of Ottomans, Habsburgs and Venetians. After all, the same as in Hungary, most witch-hunts in northwestern Croatia happened in peacetime, and particularly massive
persecutions corresponded with crop failure and famine. Therefore, it is no wonder that the first witch-hunts of the early modern period in northern Croatia were not documented until the late 16th century, when the Ottoman threat subsided briefly. A more considerable impetus to witch-hunts was given by the Emperor Ferdinand III’s code, also known as the Ferdinandae, which was published in 1656. It prescribed the criminal procedure for Lower Austria (today’s northern and northwestern Austria). A Hungarian Jesuit Márton Szentiványi (Martin Sentiváni) translated it from German into Latin and printed it in 1687, after which it was also used in Hungary, Croatia and Slavonia, where the code of law was non-existent. An increasing number of witch trials in the course of the 17th century had to do with better understanding of theological basics and legal principles concerning sorcery and witchcraft. The responsibility for it rests with the Jesuits and their promotion of education and learning. These factors resulted in more massive witch-hunts starting in 1699 and lasting until the 1750s, when their end was an outcome of Maria Theresa’s decrees.
about the southern location of the Principality of Moravia, which since its very appearance caused great controversy in historiography, does not need special presentation. Although it has been successfully refuted many times, it still today strongly resonates in works of some experts who grant it the pivotal place in their presentations of historical processes in the early medieval middle Danube region. One of its greatest proponents is Martin Eggers, who has recently tried to further reinforce it, largely relying also on data from the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja. Boba also partly touched upon these data, but they take one of the central places only in Eggers’s historiographical work. A breakdown of methods that Eggers built into his historical construction, i.e. the news from the Chronicle of the Priest of Duklja that he incorporated into his view of Boba’s theory, vividly shows the unrewarding and treacherous a priori acceptance of sources that are chronologically considerably
distant from the times which they describe as irrefutably valid data, including the extrapolation of individual data from their original narrative context in order to fit them into a new historiographical interpretation.
Administration of the Empire, undoubtedly the most famous work that
carries the name of Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus, offers
a real abundance of material that can be scrutinized on different levels
and with various research goals and objectives. In many respect, as
it has been recognized a long ago and reiterated many times since, the
De Administrando Imperio is the narrative for the reconstruction of
the earliest history of the Slavic principalities in southeastern Europe.
It provides the unique information and a particular perspective. And it
brings forth legendary elements that, with its elusive nature, constitute a
genuine challenge when tried to be fit into a scholarly historiographical
discourse. This paper aims at presenting and discussing three examples
of the legendary elements found in the De Administrando Imperio and
relating one way or the other to the early Croatian history, namely, the
story of the capture of Salona that is narrated in two separate chapters
(DAI, c. 29, 14-53, c. 30, 14-61), the story of the revolt of the Croats
against the Franks (DAI, c. 30, 78-90), and the story of a saintly man
by the name of Martin (DAI, c. 31, 42-57). The stories will be first
treated as narrative texts, i.e. they will be subjected to the narratological
analysis, and then to the historiographic analysis. An attempt will
be made to (re-)interpret the content and meaning of the stories, the
role that they might have had in the collective memory, and how and
why they might have been refashioned and/or used to correspond to
the Byzantine cultural/ideological/political needs. The last is stated
bearing in mind that the stories cannot be so easily dismissed as mere
literary ploys, invented traditions and ideological-propagandistic tools
for wider dissemination since the De Administrando Imperio seems to
have been, for all intents and purposes, a secret document not intended
for general public
northwestern Croatia from the late 6th to the mid-12th centuries.
Based on the analysis of the selected fragments from Latin and Greek narrative sources it is obvious that the writers rarely focused on additional descriptions or generally speaking on additional information about the river. It can be found in only four Latin sources (Jordanes, Thomas the Archdeacon, Anonymous of Ravenna, Continuatio Ratisbonensis Annalium Fuldensium) and in one Greek source (John Kinnamos), whereas in two examples the phrase was directly taken from earlier literary examples (in Jordanes and Thomas the Archdeacon). In general, the hydronym appears much more often in Greek sources, with Menandar Protector far in the lead, citing it thirteen times directly by name (with or without apposition) or indirectly with the noun “river”. Zosimos is in second place having mentioned the hydronym nine times in all (directly and indirectly). Regarding the perception of the Sava, no general conclusion can be drawn since only a few of the analysed writers have given any basis for one. Nevertheless, one might say that the authors were aware of the great length and power of the river. Jordanes, Anonymous of Ravenna and Thomas the Archdeacon are quite telling as regard to that, and the testimony of John Kinnamos is equally explicit. Remarks about making proper arrangements to cross the river indicate that the authors (Albert of Aachen, William of Tyre) were aware of the extent of the river i.e. of its width. John Kinnamos is the only writer analysed in this paper who certainly must have seen the Sava with his own eyes since he explicitly states about having witnessed the occupation of Zemun by the emperor Manuel I Komnenos. In conclusion, it is fair to say that stages can be distinguished in which the interest in the region between the Sava, the Drava and the Danube in general was intensified and thus, accordingly, more attention was paid to the river itself. In the Latin sources analysed, this was the 9th century, when the Frankish government showed a greater interest in the river, and also the time in which the Crusaders passed through the area in the late 11th and the late 12th century, at the time of the First and Third Crusades. As for Byzantine sources, with the exception of the 4th century, which in a chronological sense does not belong to the Middle Ages, the time of the increased interest is the second half of the 6th century, when the Empire was in conflict with the Avars over Sirmium, and the 11th and the 12th century when relations with Hungary became especially intensive. A broader research base that would take a more comprehensive source material into consideration would certainly extend the number of examples mentioning the hydronym Sava and enrich the dossier, even deepen the conclusions or offer more nuanced picture, but is certainly unlikely to substantially change the conclusions. But that as it may, such endeavours will have to wait for another opportunity or another scholar.
The area of modern southwestern Vojvodina, by which is primarily understood
Syrmia (the late Roman province of Pannonia Secunda) but also the neighbouring parts of Bačka along the Danube, since they stood in direct interaction with the Roman territory, saw very dynamic processes that completely transformed the late Roman system in the formative period between late Antiquity and the early Middle Ages. However, in an attempt to elucidate the content of these processes, the modern researcher is confronted with serious limitations due to the lack of relevant sources. These limitations can be overcome to a certain degree with a complete synergy of all available historical and archaeological evidence. This paper aims to reconsider and re-contextualize the data from narrative sources and archaeological finds that belong to the period of Hunnic and Germanic domination from the mid-5th to the mid-6th centuries. The newly created political and ethnic circumstances are analyzed, and how these changes were reflected in the archaeological material is discussed. With regard to this, special attention is paid to the question of migrations and identities, both Roman and barbarian, and their mutual interaction. At the same time, it is necessary to bear in mind that the historical picture offered here is only one of possible historiographic reconstructions and that the interpretation of archaeological material is more often that not only conditional due to the uncertain context of finds.
In this, a special role is played by the national narratives, grand stories that, in their own way, interpret fomer ages, i.e. establish a linear continuity between the past and the present. In these notions, the national history is an immutable category, it is timeless and ageless, it offers eternal and irrefutable truths with an ultimate purpose. The need to establish the national ancientness and affirm historical traditions which, as bearers of special awareness, span, petrified and untarnished, the centuries prompted the élites to reach for the historical periods, in which the nation was, as is believed, in its primordial state, in the (national-mythologized) heroic age. In the Croatian case, this heroic age is without a doubt the early Middle Ages, the so-called Age of the National Rulers when the political and national identity was supposed to be formed, firmly embedded in the historic law, which has lived continuously regardless of the historical Scyllas and Charybdises that had to be avoided over ages.
Such a pivotal story from the early Middle Ages, in the grand narrative of the Croatian national imaginary, is Prince Tomislav's coronation as king. It was loaded with a specific charge and carried importance in the time of great political and social turmoils with which the first Yugoslav state, the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, abounded and which reached their first peak in the complex Croatian-Serbian relations at the onset of 1925, after the arrest of Stjepan Radić, the leader of the then Croatian Republican Peasant Party. The multiple millennial celebration of the Kingdom of Croatia in 1925, which engrossed the Croatian public at the time, was not only inteded to reinvigorate, by awakening of pride in the glorious past, the Croatian national awareness, the sense of national unity and patriotism, in which the Roman Catholic Church played a considerable role by (over)emphasizing the age-old Roman Catholic affiliation of the Croatian people, but it was also used for the everyday political and ideological goals, thus announcing a shift in the previous policy of the Croatian and Serbian political élites, which, at least ostensibly, created the impression of mutual Croatian-Serbian recognition and strengthen the cohesion of the state. King Tomislav was therefore used as an examplary symbol of a possibly peaceful and fruitful cooperation between the Croats and Serbs as well as a neuralgic point around which different Croatian political currents can gather together.
The mythologem of the millenium old tradition of the Kingdom of Croatia was successfully used by the religious, political and intellectual élites for religious, cultural, ideological and everyday political goals, even though there was no lack of mutual frictions within the Croatian corpus itself as is shown by the conflict between the Catholic episcopacy and Stjepan Radić. Conceived as a backbone for strengthening of the national identity and pride, the millennial celebration of the Kingdom of Croatia also served for bolstering of the Yugoslav state unity. This fact was not lost on the foreign press and numerous foreign correspondents praised the August Celebration in Zagreb as an announcement of the calming of the internal situation in the Yugoslavia and as a guidepost towards the state and national consolidation. In a wish to emphasize the newly found readiness to a national agreement between the Croats and Serbs there had also been unfounded exaggeration such as by the Bulgarian newspaper the Sofia „Zora“ (Dawn), which featured an article with headlines „King Alexander - a Croatian king“ that brought news (relying on the Viennese sources) of Ante Trumbić's request that „simultaneously with the millenial celebration of the establishment of the Kingdom of Croatia, king Alexander be crowned as Croatian king“, whereas the Zagreb „Novosti“ (News) even put a statement (never actually said) in Stjepan Radić's mouth that King Alexander is to be crowned with the Croatian crown by Archbishop of Zagreb.
religious persuasions or affinities might have influenced their respective policymaking. With regard to the attitude of the imperial authorities towards religious issues, it will be contended that there was no real change between their perceived tolerance before and intolerance after Christianity became a religio licita and the Christian values were adopted and imposed by the emperors as exclusively valid. In other words, the shift that occurred from polytheistic “tolerance” – notwithstanding
the fact that Christianity was not among religions enjoying such forbearance – to monotheistic “intolerance” was rather a matter of implementing the same political notions and governmental mechanisms to a newly created situation. Several other issues will also be addressed: how contemporary and later sources perceived the Diocletianic Persecution; what degree of participation in the persecution of non-Christian ordinary people can be determined from the sources; and why there is no mention of the persecution in the works of non-Christian late antique writers.
From the late 4th century AD, the South Pannonian ecclesiastical organization began to suffer blows from which it was not able to recover. By the mid-5th century AD, the decline of church organization was evident on a wider scale, and it reached its first climax with the Sirmian bishop's escape in the wake of the onslaught of Attila's Huns in 441. At that moment, the other South Pannonia diocesan seats at Cibalae, Mursa, Siscia, and, if the hypothesis is correct, Iovia Botivum had been probably vacant for some time, which may be concluded from the fact that there is no mention of their bishops in sources at all. This was also the result of the far-reaching decline of urban structures on which the ecclesiastical organization necessarily depended, and the significant outflow of local population escaping from the insecurity of everyday life and even more insecure future under conditions where netiher imperial nor the provincial authorities were no longer able to bring the necessary security. This does not mean in any way that the local Christian communities withered away or disappeared altogether. However, it was no longer possible to maintain the stable ecclesiastical administrative organization. Due to that, the jurisdiction of metropolitans from less exposed areas stretched to include these parts, which may additionally help to explain the expansion of the Salonitan bishop's jurisdiction into the region between the rivers Sava, Drava and Danube. For the region's western part, this connection continued to exist both in the Ostrogothic and early Byzantine periods during the first half of the 6th century since the bishops of Siscia participated in the Salonitan Church councils. This points to a certain revival of church organization which was made possible by the stabilization of political circumstances and the central government's greater concern for improvement of local conditions. After the Empire recaptured Sirmium and the neighbouring area from the Ostrogoths in 535, the local ecclesiastical organization was fused with new energy, which was reflected in the establishment of a new bishopric, that of Bassianae, although this attempt only proved to be short-lived. For the re-establishment of the Sirmian bishopric there was probably not enough time since already in 536 the Gepids managed to get hold of the town. In 545, the Emperor Justinian formally placed the entire Pannonia under the control of the metropolitan of Iustiniana Prima, which would mean that the Siscian bishop was now subjected to a new metropolitan. However, this could not carry much weight in reality given the overall political situation. Sirmium only returned under the Empire's sway in 567, and then, as it seems, the Orthodox pontiff was re-installed there in the person of bishop Sebastianus. By that time the episcopal seat of Siscia had been again made vacant by the death of bishop Constantinus. The Empire had no longer any real strength to contribute significantly to the survival of church organization in the former province of Pannonia Savia. This is especially the truth if one bears in mind that the Pannonian territory had already been ceded to the Langobards as a counterbalance against the Gepids. The final blow to the church organization was inflicted by the Avars and Slavs who, in 570s and 580s, gained the control of the region between the Sava, Drava and Danube. The departure of the Sirmian bishop in 582 after the fall of the town to the Avars marked the second and last climax of the decline of ecclesiastical organization in the late antique South Pannonia. Although Christianity did not disappear from these parts, it was reduce to small isolated communities that with time started cultivating their own forms of Christian worship, maintaining only the rudimentary elements of church organization.
Relations between the Franks and Bulgars in the mid-Danube area experienced, during the ninth century, a complete change, from open hostility to alliance, which was also necessarily reflected in the circumstances in southern Pannonia, although the region was not in the focus of the Bulgarian interest. The campaigns undertaken by the Bulgarian rulers (in 827, 829, and 853) did not have a lasting effect on the situation in southern Pannonia. In the first campaign, however, a transitory Bulgarian suzerainty was established over parts of southern Pannonia in the Lower Drava area, but the last invasion proved to be a complete failure. On the other hand, it can be deduced that the region between the rivers Sava, Drava and Danube played an important role in diplomatic activities, since mutual Frankish and Bulgarian embassies passed most probably through this region.
The traditional historiographic opinion maintaining that the Bulgars ruled over the eastern parts of southern Pannonia (eastern Slavonia and Syrmia) for some time, although intermittently is apparently not supported by close analysis of the evidence. Not only there is no explicit testimonies which would confirm this usual view, but the circumstantial evidence rather points to the conclusion that the Frankish influence in the territory of the entire region between the Sava, Drava and Danube was continuous and almost uninterrupted during the entire ninth century. After all, the Bulgarian interests laid farther to the northeast, and much more to the south of the main Bulgarian territory, on the Byzantine soil.
interpretations.
The multitude of hypotheses and variety of opinions on the ethnonym Guduskani/Guduščani and chrononym Gūtzēkă/Gūtzēká articulated to date in historical and philological writings only goes to show the complexity of the issue, due to which any permanent resolution justifiably seems beyond reach. Nonetheless, it can be stated with a fair amount of certainty that the Slav (Croatian) name for Constantine Porphyrogenitus’s Gūtzēkă/Gūtzēká was actually Gacka (Gadska), but does not necessarily imply, in the territorial sense, reducing the Goduskani/Guduščani from the 9th century, which probably acquired their name after it, to Gacka from the 10th century and least of all to present day Gacko polje. In other words, if we are to judge by Frankish sources, the very fact that Borna was first titled duke, i.e. prince (dux) of Guduskani/Guduščani indicates that they could have been the basis of his authority
and could have occupied a much larger territory. Linking that to Damir Karbić’s interpretation, it could even include the area from Bribir all the way to Gacka, which would in fact include the coastal region of late antiquity Liburnia. From there the Franks could have easily made Borna the Prince of Dalmatia and Liburnia since it suited their administrative perception of this region relying on conditions in antiquity and particularly the awakening of
an interest in antiquity at the time of the Carolingian renaissance, precisely when Frankish historical writings came into existence. Borna’s headquarters could have been in Bribir, as Damir Karbić believes, but perhaps only after his rule expanded to the coastal region of ancient Roman Dalmatia owing to Frankish support. It is possible that the defection of the Guduskani/Guduščani was instigated by the fact that their prince moved, by orders from Frankish rulers, from the central part of their region to its fringes, probably to be closer to the greater part of the Byzantine region in Dalmatia. It seems that Borna’s ruling title up to 819 was duke of Guduskani/Guduščani and that his promotion to prince of Dalmatia and Liburnia could have been the direct result of the uprising of the Lower Pannonian duke Liudevit considering that in the face of danger that threatened the Franks they decided to strengthen in
that way the integration of Borna’s region regardless of the different Slav identity groups existing there, among them undoubtedly the Croats too. Or perhaps the title was an award for Borna’s loyalty since that emphasized even more his commitment to the Frankish system of rule which was actually based on Roman imperial traditions (accordingly, Liudevit the leader of the South Pannonian Slavs is titled in Frankish sources exclusively asprince of Lower Pannonia). Thereby, Borna definitely stopped being a mere gentile duke.
As far as the linguistic origin of the name Gūtzēkă/Gūtzēká and Guduskani/Guduščani goes, accepting pre-Slav etymology, the presumption regarding the Goth origin is not acceptable since the presents of the Goths in the area of Liburnia and Dalmatia generally was not so domi
nant as to justify this connection, and particularly that the notion would survive for so many centuries after the fall of the Goth state in Italy in the 6th century. Finally, why would precisely the broader area of Gacka be so important to the Goths to inhabit so many of their people there when Salona was the centre of the province and their war efforts with the Eastern Romans (Byzantines) were actually directed at taking over that urbanized space? Speculations
on the existence of the settlement Guduscum, Gata, i.e., Gotiscum or Gotisca that would give Gacka parish a name can also be discarded since there are no indications to that effect in either historical or archaeological sources. The obsolete view that the Guduskani/Guduščani actually originated in the area of present day Serbia and joined the Franks together with the Timochani cannot be accepted since the arguments for such a conclusion are arbitrary and unfounded. On the other hand if we bear in mind the testimony of the Arab geographer al Masud, it would not be improbable that there were some Slav people in Serbia of the same or similar name given that sources tell us of the existence of the Abodrites (Bodriči) in the north, in Polablje and in the south along the Danube, the Sorabs in the north in Polablje and in the south in Dalmatia (province from antiquity), as well as Moravljani both north of central Danube and in Serbia along the rivers of the same name in both cases. Whatever the case, Borna’s Guduskani/Guduščani certainly were not the ones from the region of present day Serbia.
In conclusion, it could cautiously be contended that the Guduskani/Guduščani area was much larger than originally conceived and that it represented one of the more important factors of Borna’s rule, considering that as far as we can see, he began his career as their gentile duke.
According to Frankish sources the defection of the Guduskani/Guduščani weakened Borna’s position considerably, and he was able to regain his status only when he brought them under his rule once again, most probably with ardent Frankish support. Perhaps it would not be over-reaching to conclude that upon conquering the Guduskani/Guduščani, their territory was divided into smaller units, one of which was recorded in the 10th century by Constantine Porphyrogenitus as the Gacka parish. Finally, it is possible that their decline brought about the development of a new identity community in which they also built in their ethnic substrate, known under the name Croats.
Application requirements (in Croatian): http://www.ffzg.unizg.hr/wp-content/uploads/2018/07/Natjecaj_PDS_2018_2019_izmjena.pdf
Speakers:
Hrvoje GRAČANIN (University of Zagreb)
Amelia R. BROWN (Australian Society for Byzantine Studies)
Bronwen NEIL (Macquarie University)
Ryan W. STRICKLER (University of Queensland)
Ivan BASIĆ (University of Split)
Danijel DŽINO (Macquarie University)