00894nam0-22002891i-450-99000401553040332120080328092543.0000401553FED01000401553(Aleph)000401553FED0100040155319990604d1985----km-y0itay50------baitay-------001yyStromatiNote di vera filosofiaClemente AlessandrinoIntr. trad. e note di Giovanni PiniMilanoEdizioni Paolinec1985913 p.20 cmLetture cristiane delle originiTesti20Clemens Alexandrinus<ca. 150-215/216>152170Pini,GiovanniITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990004015530403321P2B-610-CLEMENS A.-409B-1985Dip.Disc.st. 652FLFBCFLFBCStromati473089UNINA03173oam 2200481I 450 991015456550332120180815073722.01-351-87892-11-315-23606-010.4324/9781315236063 (CKB)3710000000965983(MiAaPQ)EBC4758814(OCoLC)1000426607(BIP)63378487(BIP)6321483(EXLCZ)99371000000096598320180706e20162000 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierThrough the looking glass Byzantium through British eyes : papers from the twenty-ninth Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies, London, March 1995 /edited by Robin Cormack and Elizabeth JeffreysAbingdon, Oxon :Routledge,2016.1 online resource (271 pages) illustrationsSociety for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies. Publications ;7First published 2000 by Ashgate Publishing.0-86078-667-6 1-351-87893-X section 1. Encounters with places -- section 2. Encounters with books -- section 3. Interpreters -- section 4. Encounters with the imagined Byzantium.The papers in this volume derive from the 29th Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies. This was held for the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies in the University of London in March 1995, in order to complement the British Museum exhibition 'Byzantium. Treasures of Byzantine Art and Culture'. The objective of the symposium was to explore the ways in which British scholars, travellers, novelists, architects, churchmen and critics came into contact with Byzantium, and how they perceived what they saw. The present volume sets out some of the results of this enquiry. Byzantium is treated both as a source of influence on British culture as well as an 'idea' which British culture constructed in different ways in different periods of history. To give some comparative context, attention is also paid to attitudes towards Byzantium in continental Europe. Papers deal, amongst other topics, with the collecting of objects representative of Byzantine culture and with the changing appreciation of Byzantine manuscripts. They also include a series of case studies of individual historians and Byzantinists, and two deal in particular with Ruskin, who emerges as a perceptive 19th-century critic of Byzantine culture. Through the Looking Glass is volume 7 in the series published by Ashgate/Variorum on behalf of the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies.Publications (Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies (Great Britain)) ;7.Byzantine EmpireHistoryCongresses949.502Cormack Robin185577Jeffreys Elizabeth161880Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies (Great Britain)FlBoTFGFlBoTFGBOOK9910154565503321Through the looking glass2071192UNINA