Byzantine MagicHarvard University Press edited by Henry Maguire ISBN: 0884022307 price: $30.00
In recent years considerable attention has been given to magic
in the societies of ancient Greece and Rome, of late antiquity,
and of the medieval West. Much less attention, however, has been
given to the phenomenon of magic in eastern Christendom during
the middle ages.
The papers in this volume, written by specialists in several
disciplines, explore the parameters and significance of magic in
Byzantine society, from the fourth century to after the empire's
fall. The authors address a wide variety of questions, some of
which are common to all historical research into magic, and some
of which are peculiar to the Byzantine context.
Among the topics discussed are the attitudes of the early church
fathers toward the evil eye and their efforts to reconcile that
belief with orthodox Christian theology, the physical evidence
provided by archaeology for magical practices during the early
Byzantine period, the concerns raised by the magical use of
Christian images and the consequences for the design and
presentation of icons, the ambiguous distinctions between holy
and unholy miracles found in saints' lives and histories, the
reactions of Byzantine intellectuals to the theory and practice
of magic, and the changing attitudes toward magic between the
late antique and medieval periods as revealed by imperial
legislation and canon law. The last two chapters discuss the rich
evidence for the continued importance of magic in the late
Byzantine period, seen in texts such as practical manuals for
magicians and proceedings of trials, and, finally, the
transmission of much magical lore as a Byzantine legacy to the
Slavs.
The authors reveal the scope, the forms, and the functioning of
magic in Byzantine society, throwing light on a hitherto
relatively little-known aspect of Byzantine culture, and, at the
same time, expanding upon the contemporary debates concerning
magic and its roles in pre-modern societies.
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