Study Tours Online

The ‘Second Rome’: Byzantine Constantinople

A bird's eye map of a medieval city surrounded by the Bosphorous. i Cristoforo Buondelmonti, ‘Map of Constantinople’, in Liber Insularum Archipelago, 1422, fol. 37r. BnF, Paris. Image: Wikimedia Commons

NEW

Dr Jessica Varsallona

Seminars on Saturday 14 and Sunday 15 May

£145

 

Course description

Throughout the urban fabric of Istanbul, the past and present constantly intertwine: the domes of the Ottoman mosques, which still dominate the skyline, evoke the architecture of Hagia Sophia, and the streets of the modern city recall the arrangement of the former Byzantine imperial centre. This tour will seek to reconstruct the glories of Byzantine Constantinople within the streets of modern Istanbul.

In 330, Emperor Constantine founded the ‘Second Rome’ on the shore of the Bosporus, transforming the Greek city of Byzantion into a new Christian capital, Constantinople. For over a millennium, until the Ottoman siege of 1453, Constantinople was the seat of the Byzantine emperors and the fame of Istanbul is still tied to its Byzantine (and Ottoman) past. Together with aristocratic and ecclesiastic patrons, the imperial family monumentalized Constantinople and set artistic trends that influenced and interacted with contexts both within and outside of the Byzantine sphere.

This tour explores the artistic development of Constantinople during the ‘Byzantine millennium’ through its famous landmarks. Our journey starts at the Great Palace, which was the main imperial palace of the Byzantine emperors, located not far from the most important church of the city and the Orthodox world: Hagia Sophia (Holy Wisdom). Traces of the Great Palace are spread across the urban texture of modern Istanbul, while Hagia Sophia (recently reconverted into a mosque) is still one of the main features of the city and object of current cultural debates. We shall then move on to the northwestern quarters of Constantinople, along the shore of the Golden Horn, where, in the middle and late Byzantine periods (11th-12th and 13th-15th centuries respectively), emperors and aristocrats founded astonishing dynastic monasteries and palaces. We shall focus on the monasteries of Pantokrator and Chora, where architecture, sculpture, and figurative art combined into an apogee of the Byzantine aesthetic.

 

Online delivery

Four pre-recorded lectures and ample contextual reading and other materials are provided 2 weeks in advance of the live Zoom week-end seminars and discussions, so that students have time to immerse themselves fully in the subject. Week-end seminars take place on Saturdays and Sundays, at 14:00 and depending on student numbers also at 16:00 [London time].

 

Lecturer’s biography

Dr Jessica Varsallona completed her PhD in Byzantine Studies in 2021 at the Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman, and Modern Greek Studies of the University of Birmingham. She has a BA and MA in Art History from the University of Milan. Jessica previously taught modules of Medieval and Byzantine Art and Material Culture at the Universities of Milan and Birmingham and is currently Teaching Assistant at the University of Salerno (Italy). She has published articles on Vefa Kilise Camii (Istanbul) and the contextualisation of the Western element in Late Byzantine architecture in Constantinople. She is co-editing a volume on the most neglected aspects of the material culture of the city and currently working towards a monograph focusing on the topography and patronage of Late Byzantine Constantinople (1261-1453).

14 May - 24 Apr 2024

Seminars on Saturday 14 and Sunday 15 May

Online 

Citations