Quantity:

Byzantine Defenders of Images: Eight Saints' Lives in English Translation

Dumbarton Oaks
edited by Alice-Mary Talbot
ISBN: 0884022595
price: $35.00   hardcover

This second volume in the series Byzantine Saints' Lives in Translation introduces saints who were active during the period of the iconoclastic controversy in Byzantium (726­843). For almost a century and a half, theological and popular opinions were strongly divided on the question of the manufacture and veneration of icons of Christ, the Virgin, and saints. Iconodules, or defenders of icons, argued that the incarnation of Christ meant that He could be circumscribed, while a series of emperors imposed on the empire a policy of iconoclasm, literally the "breaking of images," claiming that Christ, as divine, could not be depicted in human form.
Among the holy men and women featured in this volume are several who opposed imperial edicts and suffered for their defense of images: the nun Theodosia, who valiantly led a group of women in the effort to save the famous icon of Christ Chalkites over the palace gate and became the first iconodule martyr; Anthousa of Mantineon, abbess of a double monastery, who was tortured with the embers from burning icons; Stephen the Younger, dragged to his death through the streets of Constantinople; Symeon of Lesbos, the pillar saint whose column was attacked by iconoclast fanatics; and Nikephoros I, patriarch of Constan-tinople and theologian of image veneration, who was deposed from his throne and exiled.
Two of the vitae provide vivid information on holy men and monasticism in the provinces during the iconoclastic era: Ioannikios, a wandering monk with special gifts for foretelling death and expelling snakes, and David, Symeon, and George, three brothers from Lesbos who exemplify a family's commitment to the monastic life.
The final vita eulogizes the empress Theodora. Wife of the ardent iconoclast Theophilos, Theodora venerated icons in secret in defiance of her husband. Following his death, she took advantage of her regency for her young son to reinstate image veneration in 843, thus ensuring the continuation of the Orthodox tradition of sacred art.