Byzantium and the Bosporus: regionality, identity, institutions

<p>This thesis presents a historical study of the relationship between the city of ancient Byzantium and the Thracian Bosporus. Structured around the themes of regional particularity and identity, it shows that local studies can be used to gain fresh insights into more general topics. Viewed t...

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Main Authors: Russell, T, Thomas Russell
Other Authors: Thonemann, P
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2013
Subjects:
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author Russell, T
Thomas Russell
author2 Thonemann, P
author_facet Thonemann, P
Russell, T
Thomas Russell
author_sort Russell, T
collection OXFORD
description <p>This thesis presents a historical study of the relationship between the city of ancient Byzantium and the Thracian Bosporus. Structured around the themes of regional particularity and identity, it shows that local studies can be used to gain fresh insights into more general topics. Viewed through the lens of the relationship between strait and city, the history of the Bosporus sheds light on the nature of economic exploitation and ancient imperialism, and on the nature of ancient communities’ local identities.</p> <p>Chapter 1 explores regionally specific geographical features in the strait, which directed and determined responses to life in the area, around which the regional economy revolved, and in response to which the identities of the local communities were created. Chapters 2 and 3 examine the history of economic exploitation of the region, exploring the attitude of the Athenian Empire toward the Bosporus, and the attempt by the local communities of the Bosporus to create a controlled monetary system in the third century BC. These efforts to exploit local opportunities and commodities, I show, transformed the Bosporus into an attractive economic resource. Chapter 4 examines the local fishing industries of the strait, and demonstrates that the extraordinary availability of fish in the region provoked responses which could not be emulated precisely elsewhere.</p> <p>The thesis also shows that the cultural identity of a Greek city could be intensely local. Byzantium, a Greek colony typically characterized by its relationship to its mother-city, had a series of important local identities, explored in chapter 1. From this perspective, chapter 5 re-examines the difficult relationship between Greeks and Thracians in the region, and chapter 6 questions the validity of the traditional view of the relationship between a colony and its mother-city.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:e476c6b2-14b1-4e3d-a69b-959c67bc1bb72022-03-27T10:16:53ZByzantium and the Bosporus: regionality, identity, institutionsThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:e476c6b2-14b1-4e3d-a69b-959c67bc1bb7HistoryGreek archeologyEconomic and Social HistoryHistory of the ancient worldEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2013Russell, TThomas RussellThonemann, P<p>This thesis presents a historical study of the relationship between the city of ancient Byzantium and the Thracian Bosporus. Structured around the themes of regional particularity and identity, it shows that local studies can be used to gain fresh insights into more general topics. Viewed through the lens of the relationship between strait and city, the history of the Bosporus sheds light on the nature of economic exploitation and ancient imperialism, and on the nature of ancient communities’ local identities.</p> <p>Chapter 1 explores regionally specific geographical features in the strait, which directed and determined responses to life in the area, around which the regional economy revolved, and in response to which the identities of the local communities were created. Chapters 2 and 3 examine the history of economic exploitation of the region, exploring the attitude of the Athenian Empire toward the Bosporus, and the attempt by the local communities of the Bosporus to create a controlled monetary system in the third century BC. These efforts to exploit local opportunities and commodities, I show, transformed the Bosporus into an attractive economic resource. Chapter 4 examines the local fishing industries of the strait, and demonstrates that the extraordinary availability of fish in the region provoked responses which could not be emulated precisely elsewhere.</p> <p>The thesis also shows that the cultural identity of a Greek city could be intensely local. Byzantium, a Greek colony typically characterized by its relationship to its mother-city, had a series of important local identities, explored in chapter 1. From this perspective, chapter 5 re-examines the difficult relationship between Greeks and Thracians in the region, and chapter 6 questions the validity of the traditional view of the relationship between a colony and its mother-city.</p>
spellingShingle History
Greek archeology
Economic and Social History
History of the ancient world
Russell, T
Thomas Russell
Byzantium and the Bosporus: regionality, identity, institutions
title Byzantium and the Bosporus: regionality, identity, institutions
title_full Byzantium and the Bosporus: regionality, identity, institutions
title_fullStr Byzantium and the Bosporus: regionality, identity, institutions
title_full_unstemmed Byzantium and the Bosporus: regionality, identity, institutions
title_short Byzantium and the Bosporus: regionality, identity, institutions
title_sort byzantium and the bosporus regionality identity institutions
topic History
Greek archeology
Economic and Social History
History of the ancient world
work_keys_str_mv AT russellt byzantiumandthebosporusregionalityidentityinstitutions
AT thomasrussell byzantiumandthebosporusregionalityidentityinstitutions