The Byzantine Lists: Errors of the LatinsUniversity of Illinois Press Tia M. Kolbaba ISBN: 025202558X price: $34.95 hardcover
The Byzantine lists cataloguing the "errors" of
Latin Christians have been dismissed by generations of scholars
as the writings of deranged fanatics. In contrast, Tia M. Kolbaba
takes these texts seriously and presents an explanation of their
significance that is both erudite and eminently readable.
The lists were written by Byzantines who believed that western
Christians had fallen into heresy and impiety. Systematically
addressing each fault enumerated in the lists--including fasting
on the Sabbath, prohibiting clerical marriage, eating unclean
food, and crossing themselves the wrong way--Kolbaba traces the
likely explanations of the differences in custom and ritual
between eastern and western Christians.
She considers when Byzantine Christians first raised a given
issue and whether any ecclesiastical law speaks to the subject.
She discusses whether the Latins actually did what they were
accused of and whether any Byzantine Christians did what the
Latins were accused of. She also shows how misinterpretation,
misunderstanding, and xenophobia played a role in exaggerating
Latin and Byzantine differences.
Kolbaba skillfully argues that the lists represent a desperate
effort by some Byzantines to retain their cultural independence
as Latin dominance in the military and commercial spheres slowly
strangled the eastern empire. The Byzantine Lists also speaks
meaningfully to the issue of xenophobia as it appears in every
age: the effort to distinguish between "us" and
"them" by establishing one's own culture as the norm
and condemning difference on the other side.
|