RT Book T1 Monks and laymen in Byzantium, 843-1118 A1 Morris, Rosemary LA English PP Cambridge PB Cambridge University Press YR 1995 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/883479702 AB In Byzantium monks did not form a separate caste, apart from society. They were not only loyal to their own houses or monastic leaders, but also formed part of a nexus of social, economic and spiritual relationships which bound together the 'powerful' in the middle Byzantine state. Their monasticism, unlike the Western religious 'orders', displayed a highly individualistic streak. Using hagiography, chronicles and, in particular, the archives of the Athonite monasteries, this book reassesses the role of monks in Byzantine society and examines the reasons for the flowering of the monastic life in the period from the end of iconoclasm to the beginning of the twelfth century. The first study of its kind in English, it is aimed at anyone interested in either the Western or the Byzantine early medieval religious life. AB 1. The resurgence of the monastic life -- 2. Groups, communities and solitaries -- 3. Monastic founders -- 4. Monasticism and society -- 5. Piety, patronage and politics -- 6. Monasteries and the law -- 7. Fortune and misfortune -- 8. Territorial expansion and spiritual compromise -- 9. The challenge to central authority -- 10. The Komnene reaction -- Appendix: Imperial privileges to monasteries, c. 900-1118 NO Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Oct 2015) CN BX385.B9 SN 9780511523076 K1 Orthodox Eastern monasticism and religious orders : Byzantine Empire : History, Middle Ages, 600-1500. K1 Orthodox Eastern monasticism and religious orders : Byzantine Empire : History : Middle Ages, 600-1500 K1 Orthodox Eastern monasticism and religious orders ; Byzantine Empire ; History ; Middle Ages, 600-1500 K1 Byzantine Empire ; Church history K1 Byzantine Empire : Church history. K1 Byzantine Empire : Church history DO 10.1017/CBO9780511523076