Visual and Performing Arts
Byzantium and Landscapes of Loss: The Recreation of Constantinople in the Laskarid and Palaiologan Eras
Document Type
Book
Abstract
This richly illustrated book presents the art, architecture, and material culture of a little-known Byzantine dynasty, the Laskarids of Nicaea (1204–1261), uncovering their multiple contributions to the so-called Palaiologan renaissance which occurred in Constantinople after the city was regained in 1261. It adds many new examples of artistic and archaeological material to the existing historical work on the period. These include new and renovated fortifications, churches, palaces, and defensive towers, as well as artistic media such as mosaics, frescoes, coins, seals, inscriptions, and ceramics. Naomi Pitamber argues that features from Constantinople and its associated imperial history were recalled, edited, and selected for quotation in Nicaean exile and informed the Palaiologan renaissance in Constantinople. Laskarid cultural production in Asia Minor physically linked the urban imperial past of Constantinople to the present exilic moment, building a bridge to a yet unknown but much hoped-for future reuniting capital, court, empire, and people. © Naomi Ruth Pitamber 2026.
Publication Title
Byzantium and Landscapes of Loss: The Recreation of Constantinople in the Laskarid and Palaiologan Eras
Publication Date
2026
First Page
1
Last Page
329
ISBN
9781009331791
DOI
10.1017/9781009331777
Keywords
Laskarids of Nicaea, Byzantine art, Byzantine architecture
Repository Citation
Pitamber, Naomi Ruth, "Byzantium and Landscapes of Loss: The Recreation of Constantinople in the Laskarid and Palaiologan Eras" (2026). Visual and Performing Arts. 47.
https://commons.clarku.edu/faculty_visual_performing_arts/47
