1st Edition

Politics, Conflict and the Monastic Topography of 15th-Century Constantinople

By Nicholas Melvani Copyright 2026
308 Pages 78 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

308 Pages 78 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This study of Constantinople's monasteries within their urban framework during the last decades of Byzantium (1394–1453) explores the activity of monks, nuns, and affiliated laypeople such as patrons just before the city’s Ottoman conquest and transformation into the capital of an Islamic Empire. The book captures aspects of Byzantine institutions, social and economic networks, scholarly and... Read more

Introduction

1. Monastic Authority and Public Life in the “City-State” of Constantinople

2. Monks and Nuns in the Entangled Economies of the Eastern Mediterranean

3. Monasteries and Social Networks in Late Palaiologan Constantinople

4. Monastic Hesychia and Byzantine Humanism

5. Monasteries and Visual Culture in 15th-Century Constantinople

6. The Sacred Topography of 15th-Century Constantinople

Conclusion

Biography

Nicholas Melvani is Research Associate at Johannes Gutenberg-University in Mainz and has held fellowships at Koç University in Istanbul and at Princeton University. His publications include the monograph Late Byzantine Sculpture (2013) and numerous articles on Byzantine sculpture, epigraphy, monasticism, and the topography of Constantinople.