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Founded by Constantine the Great, rebuilt by Justinian, and redecorated in the ninth, tenth and twelfth centuries, the church of the Holy Apostles in Constantinople was the mausoleum of emperors, patriarchs, and saints. It was also a key station in the ceremonies of the city, the site of an important school, a major inspiration for apostolic literature, and briefly the home of the patriarch. Despite its importance, the church no longer exists, replaced by the mosque of Mehmet II after the fall of the city to the Ottomans. Today it is remembered primarily from two important middle Byzantine ekphraseis, which celebrate its beauty and importance, as well as from architectural copies and manuscript illustrations. Scholars have long puzzled over its appearance, as well as its importance to the Byzantines. Anxious to reconstruct the building and its place in the empire, an early collaborative project of Dumbarton Oaks brought together a philologist, an art historian and an architectural historian in the 1940s and 1950s to reconstruct their own version of the Holy Apostles. Never fully realized, their efforts remained unpublished. The essays in this volume reconsider their project from a variety of vantage points, while illuminating differences of approach seventy years later, to arrive at a twenty-first century synthesis.
Church buildings --- Church architecture --- Architectural rendering --- Architecture, Byzantine --- Byzantine architecture --- Byzantine revival (Architecture) --- Architectural renderings --- Rendering, Architectural --- Architectural drawing --- Architecture --- Ecclesiastical architecture --- Rood-lofts --- Christian art and symbolism --- Religious architecture --- Architecture, Gothic --- Churches --- Buildings --- Church facilities --- Hagioi Apostoloi (Church : Istanbul, Turkey) --- Dumbarton Oaks --- Harvard University. --- Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection --- Dumbarton Oaks Research Library & Collection --- Dumbarton Oaks Research Library --- Robert Woods Bliss Collection of Pre-Columbian Art --- Holy Apostles (Church : Istanbul, Turkey) --- Apostelkirche (Istanbul, Turkey) --- Saints Apôtres (Church : Istanbul, Turkey) --- Istanbul. --- Istanbul (Turkey). --- Church of the Holy Apostles (Istanbul, Turkey) --- Church of the Apostles (Istanbul, Turkey) --- Church of the Apostles (Constantinople) --- Khramʺ Svi︠a︡tykhʺ apostolovʺ (Konstantinopolʹ) --- History --- Istanbul (Turkey) --- Stamboul (Turkey) --- Stampōl (Turkey) --- Stambul (Turkey) --- Stěmpol (Turkey) --- T︠S︡arigrad (Turkey) --- Istāmbūl (Turkey) --- T︠S︡arʹgrad (Turkey) --- Āsitānah (Turkey) --- Ḳushṭa (Turkey) --- İstanbul Büyük Şehir Belediyesi (Turkey) --- Greater Istanbul Municipality (Turkey) --- İstanbul Anakent Belediyesi (Turkey) --- İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyesi (Turkey) --- Polē (Turkey) --- Estambul (Turkey) --- Baladīyat Isṭānbūl (Turkey) --- Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality (Turkey) --- Constantinople --- Buildings, structures, etc. --- Conferences - Meetings --- Saints-Apôtres (Constantinople)
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This book presents the proceedings of the international conference “The Middle Ages in the Modern World,” held in Rome November 21-24, 2018. Attended by more than a hundred participants of different ages, educational backgrounds, and places of origin, the conference constituted a landmark in the study of medievalism: the historical discipline, now in full bloom, that investigates the ways in which the thousand-year period between 500 and 1500 was, and continues to be, presented, reconstructed, and imagined in successive eras. The book opens with a substantial bibliography drawn from all of its components, followed by the seven keynote lectures and ninety-three shorter texts - abstracts of the individual conference papers - organized along eight thematic pathways, which together provide a vivid image of the current state of the field.
History --- medievalism --- historiography --- medieval civilisation --- Médiévisme --- Civilisation médiévale --- Historiographie
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