PAULINE ALLEN
Books:
P. Allen and B. Neil, Scripta saeculi VII vitam Maximi Confessoris illustrantia, Corpus Christianorum Series Graeca 39 (Turnhout/Leuven, 1999). Pp. l + 250.
W. Mayer and P. Allen, John Chrysostom (London/New York, 2001). Pp. x + 230.
P. Allen and B. Neil, Maximus the Confessor and his Companions: Documents from Exile, (Oxford University Press; Oxford, 2002).
Books Edited:
M.B. Cunningham and P. Allen (eds.), Preacher and Audience: Studies in Early Christian and Byzantine Homiletics (Leiden, 1998). Pp. viii + 370.
P. Allen, R. Canning and L. Cross (eds.), Prayer and Spirituality in the Early Church, Volume 1 (Brisbane, 1998). Pp. xvi + 409.
P. Allen, W. Mayer and L. Cross (eds.), Prayer and Spirituality in the Early Church, Volume 2 (Brisbane, 2000). Pp. xx + 440.
Book Chapters:
M.B. Cunningham and P. Allen, “Introduction,” Preacher and Audience: Studies in Early Christian and Byzantine Homiletics (1998) 1-20.
“The Sixth-Century Homily: A Re-assessment,” in Preacher and Audience: Studies in Early Christian and Byzantine Homiletics (1998) 201-225.
“The Preacher and the Audience in the Patristic World,” in J. Bigelow (ed.), Our Cultural Heritage, Papers from the 1997 Symposium of The Australian Academy of the Humanities (Canberra, 1998) 203-218.
“A Bishop’s Spirituality: The Case of Severus of Antioch,” in Prayer and Spirituality in the Early Church (1998) 169-180.
“The Identity of Sixth-Century Preachers and Audiences in Byzantium,” in G.W. Clarke (ed.), Identities in the Eastern Mediterranean in Antiquity, = Mediterranean Archaeology 11 (1999) 245-253.
“Severus of Antioch and Pastoral Care,” in Prayer and Spirituality in the Early Church, Volume 2 (1999) 387-400.
“John Chrysostom,” pp. 1128-1150 in P.E. Esler (ed.), The Early Christian World, Volume 2 (London/New York, 2000).
Journal Articles:
“John Chrysostom’s Homilies on I and II Thessalonians: The Preacher and His Audience,” Studia Patristica 31 (1997) 3-21.
P. Allen and W. Mayer, “Through a Bishop’s Eyes: Towards a Definition of Pastoral Care in Late Antiquity,” Augustinianum 40 (2000) 345-497.
“Severus of Antioch as Pastoral Carer,” Studia Patristica 35 (2001) 353-368.
Encyclopaedia Entries:
Thirty-seven articles in A. Di Berardino (ed.), Patrologia V, I Padri orientali (secoli V-VIII) (Genoa, 2000).
Other Publications:
P. Allen (ed.), Association Internationale d’Etudes Patristiques, Bulletin d’information et de Liaison 33 (2000) pp 79.
P. Allen (ed.), Association Internationale d’Etudes Patristiques, Bulletin d’information et de Liaison 34 (2001) pp. 109.
JOAN BARCLAY LLOYD
Book:
J.E. Barclay Lloyd and K. Bull-Simonsen Einaudi, Ss. Cosma e Damiano in Mica Aurea: Architettura, storia e storiografia di un monastero romano soppresso, Miscellanea della Societa Romana di Storia Patria 28 (Societa Romana di Storia Patria; Rome, 1998). Pp. 164 pages, 65 illustrations and 5 drawings by J.M.Blake.
Book Chapters:
J.E. Barclay Lloyd, “The Depictions of Figures from the Hebrew Scriptures in the Art of the Roman Catacombs,” in P. Allen, R. Canning and L. Cross (eds.), Prayer and Spirituality in the Early Church, volume 1 (Brisbane, 1998) 97-110.
J.E. Barclay Lloyd, “The Medieval Rebuilding and Decoration of the Early Christian Church of San Clemente in Rome,” in P. Allen, W. Mayer and L. Cross (eds.), Prayer and Spirituality in the Early Church, volume 2 (Brisbane, 1999)
279-297.
J.E. Barclay Lloyd, “The River of Life in the Medieval Mosaics of S. Maria Maggiore in Rome,” in Bernard J. Muir (ed.), Reading Texts and Images: Essays in Medieval and Renaissance Art and Patonage in Honour of Margaret M. Manion (Exeter University Press; Exeter, 2002) 35-55 (includes 16 b&w figures).
LENA CANSDALE
Book Chapters:
Lena Cansdale, “Vikings by Boat to Byzantium,” Byzantium and the North, Acta Byzantina Fennica 9 (Helsinki, 1999) 9-20.
Lena Cansdale, “Harald, a Viking Prince in Byzantium”, Byzantium and the North, Acta Byzantina Fennica 10 (Helsinki, 2000) 42-50.
BRIAN CROKE
Book:
Brian Croke, Count Marcellinus and His Chronicle (Oxford University Press; Oxford, 2001).
Book Chapters:
Brian Croke, “Wilken, Mommsen, and the Invention of Papyrology,” in T.W. Hillard, R.A. Kearsley, C.E.V. Nixon, and A.M. Nobbs (eds.), Ancient History in a Modern University, volume 1 (Eerdmans; Michigan/Cambridge, 1998) 192- 204.
Brian Croke, “Latin Historiography in the Barbarian Kingdoms,” in Later Greek and Latin Historiography: Fourth to Sixth Century (Brill; Leiden, 2002).
Journal Articles:
Brian Croke, “Chronicles, Annals, and `Consular Annals’ in Late Antiquity,” Chiron 31 (2001) 291-331.
Forthcoming 2003: Article:
Brian Croke, “The Imperial Reigns of Leo II,” Byzantinische Zeitschrift 96 (2003).
TIM DAWSON
Books:
Tim Dawson, Everday Women’s Clothing of the Byzantine Empire: c. 900-c. 1204, Levantia Historical Guides 1 (Levantia; Armidale, 2002) ISBN 0-9580481-0-X.
Tim Dawson, Everday Men’s Clothing of the Byzantine Empire: c. 900-c. 1204, Levantia Historical Guides 2 (Levantia; Armidale, 2002) ISBN 0- 9580481-1-8
Tim Dawson, Introduction to Middle Byzantine Footwear, Levantia Historical Guides 3 (Levantia; Armidale, 2002) ISBN 0-9580481-4-2
Book Chapters:
Tim Dawson, “Suntagma Hoplon: The Equipment of Regular Byzantine Troops, c. 950 to c. 1204,” in David Nicolle (ed.), Companion to Medieval Arms and Armour (Boydell and Brewer; London, 2002) ISBN 085115 872 2.
Journal Articles:
Tim Dawson, “Kremasmata, Kabbadion, Klibanion: Some Aspects of Middle Byzantine Military Equipment Reconsidered,” Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies 22 (1998) 38-50.
Tim Dawson, “Concerning an Unrecogised Tunic from Eastern Anatolia”, Byzantion 72 (2002) 1-10.
Forthcoming 2003: Journal Article:
Tim Dawson, “Klivanion Revisited: An Evolutionary Typology and Catalogue of Middle Byzantine Lamellar,” Journal of Roman Military Equipment Studies 13 (2002).
LYNDA GARLAND
Books:
L. Garland, Byzantine Empresses: Women and Power in Byzantium, AD 527-1204 (Routledge; London/New York, 1999). Pp. xix, xix + 343, with 28 plates. ISBN 0-415-14688-7.
M.P.J. Dillon and L. Garland, Ancient Greece: Social and Historical Documents from Archaic Times to the Death of Socrates (c. 800-399 BC), 2nd ed. (Routledge; London/New York, 2000). Pp. xx + 540. ISBN 0-415-217-547, 0- 415-217-555 (pb).
Journal Articles:
L. Garland, “How Different, How Very Different from the Home Life of Our Own Dear Queen: Sexual Morality at the Late Byzantine Court, with Especial Reference to the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries,” Byzantine Studies/Études Byzantines, new series 1-2 (1995-1996 [1998]) 1-49.
L. Garland, “Social and Family Life at Court in the Eleventh and Twelfth Centuries: Imperial Women and their Priorities,” in Acts, 18th International Byzantine Congress, Selected Papers: Main and Communications, Moscow, 1991, ed. I. Sevcenko and G.G. Litavrin = Byzantine Studies/Études Byzantines, new series 1 (1998) 184-195.
L. Garland, “The Fair Shepherdess: a Translation of JH Eumorfh Boskopouvla, with an Introduction”, Modern Greek Studies Yearbook, 12 (1996/1997 [1998]) 423-39.
L. Garland, “Stephen Hagiochristophorites: logothete tou genikou 1182/83-1185″, Byzantion 69.1 (1999) 18-23.
L. Garland, “Basil II as Humorist”, Byzantion 69 (1999) 321-43.
L. Garland, “Byzantium’s Age of Chivalry: the Historical Context of Digenes Akrites and the Akritic Songs,” Review article on Digenes Akrites: New Approaches to Byzantine Heroic Poetry, ed. Roderick Beaton and David Ricks (1993), for Modern Greek Studies Yearbook 12/13 (1998) 573-89.
Reviews:
L. Garland, Review of Jacqueline Long, Claudian’s In Eutropium or, How, When, and Why to Slander a Eunuch (1997) in Ancient History: Resources for Teachers 27 (1998) 157-65.
L. Garland, Review of D.M. Nicol, The Reluctant Emperor: A Biography of John Cantacuzene, Byzantine Emperor and Monk, c. 1295-1383 (1996) for Parergon 16 (1998) 190-92.
L. Garland, Review of Kita Sapurna and Pandora Petrovska, Children of the Bird Goddess: a Macedonian Autobiography (1997) for Journal of Australian Folklore 13 (1998) 271-73.
L. Garland, Review of L.J. Engels and H. Hofmann (eds.), Neues Handbuch der Literaturwissenschaft, volume 4: Spätantike mit einem Panorama der Byzantinischen Literatur (1997) for Classical Review 49 (1999) 100-02.
L. Garland, Review of Geoffrey Horrocks, Greek: A History of the Language and Its Speakers, (1997) for Parergon 16 (1999) 253-57.
L. Garland, Review of Margaret Mullett, Theophylacht of Ochrid: Reading the Letters of a Byzantine Archbishop, (1997) for Parergon 16 (1999) 279-83.
L. Garland, Review of Andrew Stewart, Art, Desire, and the Body in Ancient Greece (1997) for The European Legacy: Towards New Paradigms (Cambridge, MA) 6.4 (2001) 537-8.
Encyclopaedia Entries (Online):
L. Garland, “Sophia,” “Ino (Anastasia),” “Constantina,” “Leontia,” “Fabia (Eudocia),” “Gregoria,” “Leo IV,” “Constantine VI and Irene,” in De Imperatoribus Romanis: An Online Encyclopedia of Roman Emperors http://www.salve.edu/~romanemp.
Forthcoming 2003: Journal Article:
L. Garland, “A Treasury Minister in Hell: a Little-Known Dialogue of the Dead of the Twelfth Century”, Modern Greek Studies Yearbook 19 (2003).
ANDREW GILLETT
Book Edited:
Andrew Gillett (ed.), On Barbarian Identity: Critical Approaches to Ethnicity in the Early Medieval West, Studies in the Early Middle Ages 4 (University of York/Brepols; Turnhout, 2002). Pp. xxiv + 265. ISBN 2-503-51168-6.
Book Chapters:
Andrew Gillett, “Jordanes and Ablabius,” in Carl Deroux (ed.), Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History X, Collection Latomus 254 (Brussels, 2000) 479-500.
Andrew Gillett, “The Purposes of Cassiodorus’s Variae” in Alexander C. Murray (ed.), After Rome’s Fall: Narrators and Sources of Early Medieval History (University of Toronto Press: Toronto, 1998) 37-50.
Andrew Gillett, “Introduction: History, Ethnicity, and Methodology,” in On Barbarian Identity (above) 1-18.
Andrew Gillett, “Was Ethnicity Politicized in the Earliest Medieval Kingdoms?” in On Barbarian Identity (above) 85-121.
Journal Articles:
Andrew Gillett, “Rome, Ravenna, and the Last Western Emperors,” Papers of the British School at Rome 69 (2001) 131-167.
Andrew Gillett, “The Accession of Euric,” Francia 26/1 (1999) 1-40.
Encyclopedia Entries:
Thirteen entries for Andrew Traver (ed.), From Polis to Empire: The Ancient World, c. 800 BC-AD 500 (Greenwood; Westport, 2002): “Aetius,” “Alaric,” “Attila,” “Claudian,” “Euric,” “Eusebius,” “Galla Placidia,” “Odoacer,” “Ricimer,” “Sidonius,” “Stilicho,” “Syagrius,” “Ulfila.”
Two entries for Jana Schulman (ed.), The Rise of the Medieval World, 500-1300 (Greenwood; Westport, 2002): “Jordanes,” “Procopius.”
Reviews:
Andrew Gillett, Review of G. W. Bowersock, Peter Brown, and Oleg Grabar (eds.), Interpreting Late Antiquity: Essays on the Postclassical World (2002) for Scholia 12 (2003) online at http://www.classics.und.ac.za/reviews/2003.htm
Andrew Gillett, Review of David Rohrbacher, The Historians of Late Antiquity (2002) for Scholia 12 (2003) online at http://www.classics.und.ac.za/reviews/2003.htm
Andrew Gillett, Review of P. E. Dutton and H. L. Kessler, The Poetry and Paintings of the First Bible of Charles the Bald (1997) for Parergon 16 (1999) 201-204.
Andrew Gillett, Review of S. Bocci, L’Umbria nel Bellum Gothicum di Procopio (1996) for Journal of Roman Studies 88 (1998) 34.
Andrew Gillett, Review of Cyril Mango and Roger Scott (eds.), The Chronicle of Theophanes Confessor: Byzantine and Near Eastern History AD 284-813 (1997) for Electronic Antiquity 5 (1998) (an abridged version of this review appeared in the Australian Association for Byzantine Studies Newsletter 35 [1998]).
Andrew Gillett, Review of P. S. Barnwell, Kings, Courtiers and Imperium: The Barbarian West, 565-725 (1997) for Ancient History 28 (1998) 62-65.
Andrew Gillett, Review of S. A. Rabe, Faith, Art, and Politics at Saint-Riquier: The Symbolic Vision of Angilbert, in Journal of Religious History 22 (1998) 107-110.
Forthcoming 2003: Book:
Andrew Gillett, Envoys and Political Communication in the Late Antique West, 411- 533, Cambridge Studies in Medieval Life and Thought 55 (Cambridge University Press; Cambridge, June 2003) ISBN 0521-81349-2.
Forthcoming 2003: Review:
Andrew Gillett, Review of Bernard Barchrach, Early Carolingian Warfare (2001) for Parergon.
SAM LIEU
Books:
S. Clarkson, E. Hunter, S.N.C. Lieu, and M. Vermes, Dictionary of Manichaean Texts, vol. 1: Texts from the Roman Empire (Texts in Syriac, Greek, Coptic and Latin) Corpus fontium Manichaeorum (Brepols; Turnhout, 1998).
S.N.C. Lieu and M. Vermes, Acta Archelai, Manichaean Studies 4 (Brepols; Turnhout, 2001). Pp. 177. ISBN 2-503-51156-2
S.N.C. Lieu and Geoffrey Greatrex, The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars, vol. 2: 363-630 (Routledge; London, 2002). Pp. 373. ISBN 0- 415-14687-9.
Book Edited:
S.N.C. Lieu and D. Montserrat (eds.), Constantine: History, Historiography and Legend (Routledge; London, 1998).
Book Chapters:
S.N.C. Lieu, “From History to Legend and Legend to History: The Medieval and Byzantine Transformation of Constantine’s Vita,” in S.N.C. Lieu and D. Montserrat (eds.), Constantine: History, Historiography and Legend (Routledge; London, 1998), pp. 136-176.
S.N.C. Lieu, “From Iran to China: The Eastward Diffusion of Manichaeism” in C. Benjamin and D. Christian (eds.), Worlds of the Silk Road, Silk Road Studies 2 (Brepols; Turnhout, 1998) 1-22.
S.N.C. Lieu, “Fact and Fiction: Ming-chiao (Manichaeism) in Jin Yong’s I-t’ien t’u-lung chi” in Proceedings of the International Conference on Jin Yong’s Novels (Taipei, 1999) 43-66.
S.N.C. Lieu, “Lexicographica Manichaica: Dictionary of Manichaean Texts, vol. 1: Texts from the Roman Empire (Texts in Syriac, Greek, Coptic and Latin)- An Interim Report and Discussion on Methodology,” in J. Van Oort (ed.), Augustine and Manichaeism Nag Hammadi and Manichaean Studies (Leiden, 1999) 137-47.
S.N.C. Lieu, “A New Figurative Representation of Mani?” in R. Emmerick and P. Zieme (eds.), Studia Manichaica 4: Internationaler Kongre zum Manichismus Berlin, 14-18 Juli, 1997 (Berlin, 2000) 380-86.
S.N.C. Lieu, “Students and Scholars in Late Roman East” in Roy MacCleod (ed.), The Library of Alexandria: Centre of Learning in the Ancient World (London, 2000) 127-42.
S.N.C. Lieu, “Byzantium, Persia and China: Interstate Relations on the Eve of the Islamic Conquest,” in David Christian and Craig Benjamin (eds.), Realms of the Silk Roads: Ancient and Modern, Silk Road Studies 4 (Brepols; Turnhout, 2000) 47-66.
Articles:
S.N.C. Lieu, “The Self-Identity of Manichaeans in the Roman East,” Mediterranean Archaeology 11 (1998) 205-227.
Forthcoming 2003: Book Edited:
Craig Benjamin and S.N.C. Lieu, Walls and Frontiers in Inner Asian History, Silk Road Studies 6 (Brepols; Turnhout 2003).
WENDY MAYER
Book:
W. Mayer and P. Allen, John Chrysostom, The Early Church Fathers (Routledge; London, 2000).
Book Edited:
P. Allen, W. Mayer and L. Cross (eds.), Prayer and Spirituality in the Early Church, Volume 2 (Brisbane, 2000). Pp. xx + 440.
Book Chapter:
W. Mayer, “John Chrysostom”, chapter 45 in The Early Christian World, ed. P. Esler, 2 vols. (Routledge; London, 2000) 1128-1150.
Articles:
W. Mayer, “Constantinopolitan Women in Chrysostom’s Circle,” Vigiliae Christianae 53 (1999) 265-288.
W. Mayer, “Female Participation and the Late Fourth-Century Preacher’s Audience,” Augustinianum 39 (1999) 139-147.
W. Mayer, “Who Came to Hear John Chrysostom Preach? Recovering a Late Fourth-Century Preacher’s Audience,” Ephemerides Theologicae Lovanienses 76 (2000) 73-87.
W. Mayer, “Cathedral Church or Cathedral Churches? The Situation at Constantinople (c.360-404 AD),” Orientalia Christiana Periodica 66 (2000) 49-68.
W. Mayer, “`Les homélies de s. Jean Chrysostome en juillet 399′. A Second Look at Pargoire’s Sequence and the Chronology of the Novae homiliae (CPG 4441),” Byzantinoslavica 60/2 (1999) 273-303.
P. Allen and W. Mayer, “Through a Bishop’s Eyes: Towards a Definition of Pastoral Care in Late Antiquity,” Augustinianum 40 (2000) 345-397.
W. Mayer, “Patronage, Pastoral Care and the Role of the Bishop at Antioch,” Vigiliae Christianae 55 (2001) 58-70.
W. Mayer, “At Constantinople, How Often Did John Chrysostom Preach? Addressing Assumptions about the Workload of a Bishop,” Sacris Erudiri 40 (2001) 83-105.
W. Mayer, “The Homily as Historical Document: Some Problems in Relation to John Chrysostom,” Lutheran Theological Journal 35 (2001) 17-22.
Encyclopaedia Article:
W. Mayer, “Aelia Eudoxia (Wife of Arcadius),” in De Imperatoribus Romanis: An on-line encyclopedia (www.roman-emperors.org; 2002).
Other: Web Site:
W. Mayer, “Bibliography of scholarship in the field of Chrysostom studies (including ps. Chrysostomica, but excluding the Liturgy of St. John Chrysostom”, http://www.acu.edu.au/earlychr (2001, updated 6-monthly)
Reviews:
W. Mayer, Review of St. John Chrysostom: On Repentance and Almsgiving trans. G.G. Christo (1998), for Journal of Early Christian Studies 7 (1999) 323-324.
W. Mayer, Review of M. Illert, Johannes Chrysostomus und das antiochenish-syrische Mönchtum (2000), for Sobornost 23 (2001) 86-88.
W. Mayer, Review of N. Russell, Cyril of Alexandria (2000), for Journal of Religious History 26 (2002) 99-100.
W. Mayer, Review of B. Leyerle, Theatrical Shows and Ascetic Lives: John Chrysostom’s Attack on Spiritual Marriage (2001) for Journal of Early Christian Studies 10 (2002) 406-408.
W. Mayer, Review of M. Mitchell, The Heavenly Trumpet: John Chrysostom and the Art of Pauline Interpretation (2000) for Journal of Early Christian Studies 10 (2002) 408-409.
Forthcoming: Books:
W. Mayer, The Homilies of St John Chrysostom – Provenance: Reshaping the Foundations (Orientalia Christiana Analecta; Rome, forthcoming).
J. Leemans, W. Mayer, P. Allen and B. Dehandschutter, “Let Us Die That We May Live”: Greek Homilies on Christian Martyrs from Asia Minor, Palestine, and Syria (c. 350-c. 450 AD), (Routledge; London, forthcoming July 2003).
Forthcoming: Article:
W. Mayer, “Antioch: Examining the episcopate of John Chrysostom from another angle”, Journal of Ecclesiastical History, forthcoming.
Forthcoming: Reviews:
W. Mayer, Review of F.R. Trombley and J.W. Watt, The Chronicle of Pseudo-Joshua the Stylite (2000) in Journal of Religious History forthcoming.
W. Mayer, Review of B. Leyerle, Theatrical Shows and Ascetic Lives: John Chrysostom’s Attack on Spiritual Marriage (2001) for Journal of Roman Studies 92 (2002) 266-267.
JOHN MELVILLE-JONES
Book:
J.R. Melville-Jones, M.P. Ghezzo, and A. Rizzi, The Morosini Codex, volumes 1 and 2 (Padua Univercity Press; Padua, 1999, 2000). Volumes 3 to 6 forthcoming.
BRONWEN NEIL
Books:
P. Allen and B. Neil, Scripta saeculi VII vitam Maximi Confessoris illustrantia, Corpus Christianorum Series Graeca 39 (Turnhout/Leuven, 1999). Pp. l-250.
P. Allen and B. Neil, Maximus the Confessor and his Companions: Documents from Exile, (Oxford University Press; Oxford, 2002).
ALANNA NOBBS
Book Edited:
T.W. Hillard, R.A. Kearsley, C.E.V. Nixon, and A.M. Nobbs (eds.), Ancient History in a Modern University, volume 1: The Ancient Near East, Greece, and Rome; volume 2: Early Christianity, Late Antiquity, and Beyond (Eerdmans; Michigan/Cambridge, 1998). Pp. 436 with 22 pages of plates (volume 1); 493 (volume 2).
Book Chapters:
A.M. Nobbs, “Formulas of Belief in Greek Papyrus Letters of the Third and Fourth Centuries,” in T.W. Hillard, R.A. Kearsley, C.E.V. Nixon, and A.M. Nobbs (eds.), Ancient History in a Modern University, volume 2, 233-37.
S.R. Llewelyn and A.M. Nobbs, “The Earliest Dated Reference to Sunday in the papyri,” in S.R. Llewelyn (ed.), New Documents Illustrating Early Christianity, volume 9: A Review of the Greek Inscriptions and Papyri Published in 1986-87, (Eerdmans; Grand Rapids/Cambridge, 2002) 86-98.
Journal Articles:
Alanna Nobbs, “Gnosticism and the Greek Papyri from Egypt,” Phronema 14 (1999)
53-60.
Alanna Nobbs, Ian Gardner and Malcolm Choat, “P.Harr. 107: Is This Another Greek Manichaean Letter?,” Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 131 (2000) 118-124.
Other: Journal Special Issue Edited:
J. Gascoigne, M. Harding, and A. Nobbs (eds.), Journal of Religious History 26 (2002) = Dead Sea Scrolls Special Issue (Blackwells; Sydney, 2002).
KEN PARRY
Book Edited:
Ken Parry (chief editor), David J. Melling, Dimitri Brady, Sydney H. Griffith, and John F. Healey (eds.), The Blackwell Dictionary of Eastern Christianity (Blackwell; Oxford, 1999; paperback edition 2001). Pp. xxii + 581.
Encyclopaedia Entries:
120 entries to The Blackwell Dictionary of Eastern Christianity (1999).
9 entries to Trevor Hart (ed.), The Dictionary of Historical Theology (Paternoster/Eerdmans; Carisle/Michigan, 2000): “John of Damascus,” “John Chrysostom,” “Symeon the New Theologian,” “John Meyendorff,” “Sergius Bulgakov,” “Nicholas Berdyaev,” “Iconoclast Controversy,” “Baalam the Calabrian,” and “Photius.”
Review:
Ken Parry, Review of G. Peers, Subtle Bodies: Representing Angels in Byzantium (2001) for Prudentia 34/1 (2002).
Other:
Curator of “Byzantine Icons” exhibition, Macquarie University Library, May-June 2001.
Curator of “Christian Angels on the South China Coast” exhibition, Macquarie University Library, March-April 2003.
Forthcoming 2003: Articles:
Ken Parry, “Byzantine and Melkite Iconophiles Under Iconoclasm,” in Judith Herrin et al., Porphyrogenita: Essays in Honour of Julian Chrysostomides (Ashgate; Aldershot, 2002).
Ken Parry, “Japan and the Silk Road Legacy,” in S. Lieu and C. Benjamin (eds.), Worlds of the Silk Roads Ancient and Modern: Walls and Frontiers in Inner Asian History, The Silk Road Studies Series 6 (Brepols; Turnhout, 2002).
Ken Parry, “The Ascetical Theology of Maximus the Confessor,” in Phronema 17 (2002).
Ken Parry, “The Christian Tombstones from Quanzhou,” Journal of the Asian Arts Society of Australia 13 (2003).
Ken Parry, “Origen and Image-Making,” in John McGuckin (ed.), The Westminster Handbook to Origen, (John Knox Press; Louisville/London, 2003).
Ken Parry, “Crisis in the Balkans: The Byzantine Monuments of Kosovo,” in The Eastern Churches Journal 8/3 (2002).
PHILIP ROUSSEAU
Books:
Philip Rousseau, Basil of Caesarea, Transformation of the Classical Heritage 20 (University of California Press; Berkeley, 1998).
Philip Rousseau, Pachomius: the Making of a Community in Fourth-Century Egypt, 2nd ed., Transformation of the Classical Heritage 8 (University of California; Berkeley, 1999).
Philip Rousseau, The Early Christian Centuries (Longmans; London, 2002).
Book Edited:
Philip Rousseau and Tomas Hägg, Greek Biography and Panegyric in Late Antiquity, Transformation of the Classical Heritage 31 (University of California Press; Berkeley, CA: 2000).
Book Chapters:
Philip Rousseau, “Jerome’s Search for Self-Identity,” in P. Allen, R. Canning and L. Cross (eds.), Prayer and Spirituality in the Early Church, Volume 1 (Brisbane, 1998).
Philip Rousseau, “`The Preacher’s Audience’: a More Optimistic View,” in T.W. Hillard, R.A. Kearsley, C.E.V. Nixon, and A.M. Nobbs (eds.), Ancient History in a Modern University, volume 2: Early Christianity, Late Antiquity, and Beyond (Eerdmans; Michigan/Cambridge, 1998) 391-400.
Philip Rousseau, “Ascetics as Mediators and as Teachers,” in James Howard-Johnston and Paul Antony Hayward (eds.), The Cult of Saints in Late Antiquity and the Early Middle Ages: Essays on the Contribution of Peter Brown (Oxford University Press; Oxford, 1999) 45-59.
Philip Rousseau and Tomas Hägg, “Introduction: Biography and Panegyric” (with Tomas Hägg), in Greek Biography and Panegyric in Late Antiquity (2000) 1-28.
Philip Rousseau, “Antony as Teacher in the Greek Life,” in Greek Biography and Panegyric in Late Antiquity (2000) 89-109.
Philip Rousseau, “Monasticism” in Averil Cameron, Bryan Ward-Perkins, and Michael Whitby (eds.), The Cambridge Ancient History, volume 14: Late Antiquity: Empire and Successors, AD 425-600 (Cambridge University Press; Cambridge, 2000) 745-780.
Journal Articles:
Philip Rousseau, “The Identity of the Ascetic Master in the Historia Religiosa of Theodoret of Cyrrhus: a New Paideia?” in G.W. Clarke (ed.), Identities in the Eastern Mediterranean in Antiquity, = Mediterranean Archaeology 11 (1998) 229-244.
Philip Rousseau, “Procopius’s Buildings and Justinian’s Pride,” Byzantion 68 (1998) 121-130.
Philip Rousseau, “Sidonius and Majorian: the Censure in Carmen V,” Historia 49 (2000) 251-257.
Encyclopaedia Entries:
Eight entries in G.W. Bowersock, Peter Brown, and Oleg Grabar (eds.), Late Antiquity: a Guide to the Postclassical World (Harvard University Press; Cambridge, MA, 1999): “Baptism,” “Basil of Caesarea,” “Bishops,” “Gregory of Nyssa,” “Monks,” “Nitria,” “Pachomius,” and “Scetis.”
Reviews:
Philip Rousseau, Review of Lynda L. Coon, Sacred Fictions: Holy Women and Hagiography in Late Antiquity (1997) for English Historical Review 114 (1999) 398-399.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Teresa M. Shaw, The Burden of the Flesh: Fasting and Sexuality in Early Christianity (1998) for Catholic Historical Review 85 (1999) 272-275.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Richard Fardon, Mary Douglas: an Intellectual Biography (1999) for Heythrop Journal 41 (2000) 474-477.
Philip Rousseau, Review of David Frankfurter (ed.), Pilgrimage and Holy Space in Late Antique Egypt (1998) for Journal of Ecclesiastical History 51 (2000) 775-776.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Moshe Halbertal, People of the Book: Canon, Meaning, and Authority (1997) for Heythrop Journal 41 (2000) 218-220.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Anthony Meredith, Gregory of Nyssa (1999) for Heythrop Journal 41 (2000) 490-491.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Lionel R. Wickham, Hilary of Poitiers: Conflicts of Conscience and Law in the Fourth-Century Church (1997) for Heythrop Journal 41 (2000) 338.
Philip Rousseau, Review of John C. Cavadini (ed.), Miracles in Jewish and Christian Antiquity: Imagining Truth (1999) for Heythrop Journal 42 (2001) 501-503.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Bruce Chilton and Jacob Neusner, Types of Authority in Formative Christianity and Judaism (1999) for Heythrop Journal 42 (2001) 368-370.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Elizabeth A. Clark, Reading Renunciation: Asceticism and Scripture in Early Christianity (1999) for Journal of Ecclesiastical History 52 (2001) 342-344.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Jeffrey W. Hargis, Against the Christians: the Rise of Early Anti-Christian Polemic (1999) for Heythrop Journal 42 (2001) 505-507.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Richard Newhauser, The Early History of Greed: the Sin of Avarice in Early Medieval Thought and Literature (2000) for Catholic Historical Review 87 (2001) 717-719.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Marilyn Dunn, The Emergence of Monasticism: from the Desert Fathers to the Early Middle Ages (2000) for Journal of Ecclesiastical History 53 (2002) 336-337.
Philip Rousseau, Review of Norman Russell, Cyril of Alexandria (2000) for Heythrop Journal 43 (2002) 229-230.
ANDREW F. STONE
Journal Articles:
Andrew F. Stone, “The Grand Hetaireiarch John Doukas: the Career of a Twelfth-Century Soldier and Diplomat,” Byzantion 69 (1999) 145-164.
Andrew F. Stone, “A Threefold Controversy Concerning the Trinity: an Unregarded Attempt at Crosspollination between the Orthodox and Islamic Faiths at Byzantium in 1180,” Greek Orthodox Theological Review (1999) 155-166.
Andrew F. Stone, “The Library of Eustathios of Thessaloniki: Literary Sources for Eustathian Panegyric,” Byzantinoslavica (1999) 351-366.
Andrew F. Stone, “Eustathian Panegyric as a Historical Source,” Jahrbuch der Österreichischen Byzantinistik (2001) 225-258.
Andrew F. Stone, “On the influence of Hermogenes’ Theory of Ideas and Other Factors Affecting Style in the Panegyrics of Eustathios of Thessaloniki,” Rhetorica (2001) 307-339.
Forthcoming: Articles:
Andrew F. Stone, “The Oration by Eustathios of Thessaloniki for Agnes of France: a Snapshot of Political Tension between Byzantium and the West,” forthcoming in Byzantion.
Andrew F. Stone, “The Funeral Oration of Eustathios of Thessaloniki for Manuel I Komnenos: the Portrait of a Byzantine Emperor,” forthcoming in Balkan Studies.
Andrew F. Stone, “Dorylaion Revisited: Manuel I Komnenos and the Refortification of Dorylaion and Soublaion in 1175,” forthcoming in Revue des Études Byzantines.
PAUL TUFFIN
William Adler and Paul Tuffin (trs.), The Chronography of George Synkellos: A Byzantine Chronicle of Universal History from the Creation (Clarendon Press; Oxford, 2002). Pp. lxxxviii + 638.
ALAN WALMSLEY
Book:
A. Walmsley, K.A. Sheedy, and R.A.G. Carson, Pella in Jordan 1979-1990: The Coins, ed. K. da Costa, Adapa Monograph Series 1. (Adapa; Sydney, 2001). ISBN 0957889003.
Book Edited:
A. Walmsley (ed), Australians Uncovering Ancient Jordan: Fifty Years of Middle Eastern Archaeology (Research Institute for Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Sydney: Sydney, 2001).
Book Chapters:
A.G. Walmsley, “Production, Exchange and Regional Trade in the Islamic East Mediterranean: Old Structures, New Systems?”, in I.L Hansen, I. L. and C. Wickham (eds.), The Long Eighth Century: Production, Distribution and Demand (Brill; Leiden, 2000) 265-343.
A.G. Walmsley, “Fatimid, Ayyubid and Mamluk Jordan and the Crusader Interlude,” in B. MacDonald, R. Adams and P. Bienkowski (eds.) The Archaeology of Jordan (Sheffield Academic Press; Sheffield, 2001) 515-559.
A.G. Walmsley, “Turning East: The Appearance of Islamic Cream Wares in Jordan – the End of Antiquity?,” in E. Villeneuve and P.M. Watson (eds.), La céramique byzantine et proto-islamique en Syrie-Jordanie (IVe – VIIIe siécles) (Institut Français d’Études Arabes; Beyrouth, 2001) 305-13.
A.G. Walmsley, “Die Dekapolis-Städte nach dem Ende des Rümischen Reiches: Kontinuität und Wandel,” in S. Kerner (ed.), Gadara – Gerasa und die Dekapolis (Philipp von Zabern; Mainz, 2002).
Journal Articles:
A.G. Walmsley, “Archaeology in Jordan: Gharandal (Arindela),” American Journal of Archaeology 102 (1998), 605-606.
A.G. Walmsley, “Gharandal in Jibal: First Season Report,” Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 42 (1998) 433-41.
A.G. Walmsley, “Archaeology in Jordan: Gharandal (Arindela),” American Journal of Archaeology 103 (1999) 517-18.
A.G. Walmsley, “Coin Frequencies in Sixth and Seventh Century Palestine and Arabia: Social and Economic Implications,” Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient 42(1999) 324-50.
A.G. Walmsley, P. Karsgaard, and A. Grey, “Town and Village: Site Transformations in South Jordan (The Gharandal Archaeological Project, Second Season Report),” Annual of the Department of Antiquities of Jordan 43 (1999) 459-478.
A.M.H. Shboul and A.G. Walmsley, “Identity and Self-image in Syria-Palestine in the Transition from Byzantine to Early Islamic Rule: Arab Christians and Muslims,” in G.W. Clarke (ed.), Identities in the Eastern Mediterranean in Antiquity, = Mediterranean Archaeology 11 (1999) 255-87.
A.G. Walmsley, “The `Islamic City’: The Archaeological Experience in Jordan,” Mediterranean Archaeology 13 (2000) 1-9.
A.G. Walmsley, “An Archaeological Evaluation of Gharandal in Jordan, 1996-1999,” Mediterranean Archaeology 13 (2000) 149-59.
A.G. Walmsley, “Restoration or Revolution? Jordan between the Islamic Conquest and the Crusades: Impressions of Twenty-Five Years of Archaeological Research,” Studies in the History and Archaeology of Jordan (Department of Antiquities, Amman) 7 (2001) 633-40.
A.G. Walmsley and A. Grey, “An Interim Report on the Pottery from Gharandal (Arindela), Jordan,” Levant 33, 137-62 (2001).
Reviews:
A.G. Walmsley, “The Christian Communities of Palestine from Byzantine to Islamic Rule: a Historical and Archaeological Study.” Review of Robert Schick, Studies in Late Antiquity and Early Islam 2, for Journal of the American Oriental Society 119 (1999) 320-22.
A.G. Walmsley, Review of Juma Mahmoud H. Kareem, The Settlement Patterns in the Jordan Valley in the Mid- to Late Islamic Period for Bulletin of the American Schools of Oriental Research 326 (2002).
A.G. Walmsley, Review of Phyllis Lambert (ed.), Fortifications and the Synagogue: the Fortress of Babylon and the Ben Ezra Synagogue, 2nd ed., for Ancient Near Eastern Studies 39 (2002).