Description
Rural Communities in Late Byzantium offers a comprehensive examination of village life in the Northern Aegean during the empire’s final centuries. Fotini Kondyli provides detailed analysis of how rural communities adapted to economic pressures, demographic changes, and external threats while maintaining social cohesion.
Through careful study of archaeological evidence, documentary sources, and material culture, the author reconstructs daily life, agricultural practices, and settlement patterns in this crucial but understudied region. The work highlights the complex interplay between local autonomy and imperial authority, demonstrating how villagers exercised agency despite broader imperial decline.
This book contributes significantly to late Byzantine studies by shifting focus from imperial centers to peripheral communities, revealing their essential role in the empire’s survival and transformation. Kondyli’s interdisciplinary approach makes this essential reading for historians of Byzantium, medieval Mediterranean studies, and rural history.







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