The Maeander Valley a historical geography from Antiquity to Byzantium

Machine generated contents note: 1. The valley; 2. Hydrographic heroes; 3. The nature of Roman Apamea; 4. The fortress at Eumenea; 5. The pastoral economy; 6. The nobility of Mt Cadmus; 7. The rural economy; 8. The bounty of the Maeander.

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Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Thonemann, Peter (VerfasserIn)
Format: UnknownFormat
Sprache:eng
Veröffentlicht: Cambridge u.a. Cambridge Univ. Press 2011
Ausgabe:1. publ.
Schriftenreihe:Greek culture in the Roman world
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Zusammenfassung:Machine generated contents note: 1. The valley; 2. Hydrographic heroes; 3. The nature of Roman Apamea; 4. The fortress at Eumenea; 5. The pastoral economy; 6. The nobility of Mt Cadmus; 7. The rural economy; 8. The bounty of the Maeander.
"Cratylus used to criticise Heraclitus for saying that it was impossible to step into the same river twice. He thought that it was impossible to step into the same river once.1 The fall of tralles, AD 1284 In the spring of the year AD 1280, the young future emperor Andronicus II Palaeologus led an army south from Constantinople into Asia Minor. Twenty years of Palaeologan rule had not been kind to the old Byzantine heartlands. After the recovery of Constantinople from the Latins in 1261, the emperor Michael VIII Palaeologus had kept his attention firmly trained on the European west. The Anatolian borderlands, the fertile coastal valleys of the Hermos, Cayster and Maeander, had largely been abandoned to their fate at the hands of the nascent Turkish warrior beyliks. Only at the very end of his life, between 1280 and 1282, did Michael make any concerted attempt to restore Byzantine authority in western Asia Minor, and by then, as would rapidly become apparent, it was far too late.2 Arriving in the valley of the river Maeander, and travelling eastwards along the north bank of the river, Andronicus passed the ruins of the ancient city of Tralles. Struck by the charms of the place, and the natural defensibility of the plateau on which the city stood, Andronicus decided to restore the ruined town as a place of refuge for the local Greek rural population (Fig. 1.1). "--
Beschreibung:Literaturverz. S. 344 - 377
Hier auch später erschienene, unveränderte Nachdrucke
Beschreibung:XXIII, 386 S.
Ill., Kt., graph. Darst.
ISBN:9781107538139
978-1-107-53813-9
9781107006881
978-1-107-00688-1