FRIENDS OF MOUNT ATHOS BOOK REVIEWS

© 1997

 

 

Mount Athos and Byzantine Monasticism: Papers from the Twenty-Eighth Spring Symposium of Byzantine Studies, Birmingham, March 1994. Edited by Anthony Bryer and Mary Cunningham. Aldershot: Variorum. 1996. 278 pages. Price h/b £39.50. ISBN 0-86078-551-3.[1]

 

The annual Spring Symposium has long since become a firm fixture in the diary of every Byzantinist in the United Kingdom, and increasingly of many from outside the British Isles. These occasions are a happy mix of serious scholarship and friendly conviviality. The tradition of publishing the papers from the symposia, however, has been less firmly established, though that is now changing. Starting with the 1990 meeting, Variorum Press has undertaken publication of the symposia on behalf of the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies, under whose auspices these occasions are convened. The volume under review is the fourth in this series of publications, and matches the high standards of its predecessors both technically and in content. This should please the Friends of Mount Athos, and especially the British contingent, who supported the occasion with their presence and several of whom, including your Secretary, took an active part in the proceedings. However, as the symposiumÕs title indicates, the focus was primarily historical and, though present developments in the monastic communities of Mount Athos and in Orthodoxy in general were not ignored, and indeed in at least one paper (Robert AllisonÕs on the library of Philotheou) were a prime instigation for the research programme under report, these were not the main target of discussion. The symposium was concerned not so much with the Athos that is a contemporary centre for Orthodox spirituality as the Athos that is a monument to a past phenomenon.

            For students of Byzantine history and culture, Athos is the prime living example of something that was a not uncommon feature of the Christian Middle Ages in the east Mediterranean: a cluster of monastic communities in a restricted geographical area. The dramatic monasteries of the Meteora, near Kalambaka, are another surviving case, but many more not dissimilar clusters once existedÑon Mount Olympus in Bithynia, for instance, or Mount Papikion and Mount Ganos in Thrace, or Mount Latros in Caria. But Athos is unique in its integrity, to which its relative geographical isolation, or rather near-island formation, has contributed. Despite the vicissitudes of its thousand years of existence, its way of life, its physical structures, and, most importantly for the historian, more of its archives than for any other Byzantine institution have been preserved to the present day. The symposium, while recognizing that it could in no way Ôclaim to be either canonical or comprehensiveÕ, set out to explore issues that reflect current scholarly concerns about the Holy Mountain. Despite this disclaimer, the scope of the papers is broad.

            Thus we find discussed the development of monasticism in Athos, by Bishop Kallistos Ware, in terms of St Athanasios, the personality who was a prime instigator of the monastic movement there, and by Rosemary Morris in terms of the documentary evidence. The spiritual underpinning of the early phases of the movement is explored by John McGuckin in connection with Symeon the New Theologian (very illuminating on SymeonÕs political affiliations) and by Dirk KrausmŸller, discussing ascetic practices in the eleventh and twelfth centuriesÑon which Archimandrite Ephrem Lash provides eye-opening contemporary insights. Alexander Lingas argues persuasively, despite the lack of explicit textual evidence, for a link between the kalophonic musical inventions of John Koukouzeles, from the Great Lavra, and the hesychast practices of the time.

            Much space is given to the physical environment of the monastic communities: there are papers by Charalambos Bakirtzis who discusses analogous structures outside Athos, in Macedonia and Thrace, and by Peter Burridge, Sotiris Voyadjis, and Ploutarchos Theocharides, all of whom analyse building developments on Athos itself, how the structures now deemed typical (an enclosing, often defensive, wall, free-standing church, etc.) came into being. Stavros Mamoulakos lists the inscriptional evidence for the patrons at Vatopedi, and finds that, while in the early years the sparse details give the prime role to aristocrats, subsequently building work seems to be done on the initiative of the monastic community itself. Then as now much would seem to depend on the vigour of the abbot. Comparatively little is said in these papers (and, it seems, in the course of the symposium) about the decoration of these structures, though GŸnter Scheimenz is interesting on the revolutionary implications of the wall-paintings that illustrate Psalms 148-50 in Koutloumousiou, Dochiariou, Iviron, and Xeropotamou (revolutions are a sub-text to this volume).

            The surviving archival material is brought into play in the papers by Alan Harvey, who, concentrating on Iviron and Lavra, looks at the evidence for monastic revenues and prosperity or otherwise, mainly in the eleventh century, and by Nikolaos Oikonomides, with a fascinating depiction of the activities of the brothers who founded Pantokrator in the mid-fourteenth century. These were the leaders of a piratical band who had carved out a Greek ÔemirateÕ for themselves but ensured their personal financial security by judicious donations to the monastery and a well-timed submission to the Turks. The Athonite monasteries can thus be seen playing a multiple role, both spiritual and material. A similar situation is presented by Elizabeth Zachariadou in connection with the early Ottoman period, when she adduces instances of the monasteries and their representatives using their protected status to function as depositories for large amounts of cash. One of the cases that she discusses involves a woman, Maria-Helena, daughter of the Serbian despot and grand-daughter of the despot of the Morea, who like many other women over the centuries was an active donor to the monasteries.

            This leads to the vexed question of the relationship of women to the Holy Mountain. The background to the unwritten rule that the Mountain is abaton, inaccessible, to women, is discussed by Alice-Mary Talbot. Is this an extension of the regular exclusion of females from male monastic houses? Tenth-century regulations for the Lavra and for Athos in general forbid the use of female animals, but specifically exclude only beardless men and eunuchs. In legend the Holy Mountain had been granted by Christ to his mother, and so no other woman should set foot on it. Be that as it may, the surviving archival material makes it clear that women frequently entered into property transactions with the monasteries, often in the normal course of estate management and also very often in order to set up a spiritual benefit: property would be donated in exchange for commemorative prayers. If in these cases the women remained outside the Mountain, nevertheless in 1347-8 the wife of the Serbian tsar Stefan Dusan accompanied him throughout a lengthy residence in Athos; he had, however, recently conquered Serres and its surrounding territory, so perhaps force majeure played a part.

            If the monasteries of Athos have survived relatively unscathed from raids and depredations, the same has not always been true of its libraries. In the past the monks themselves have sometimes been somewhat cavalier towards their possessions, while visitors have not been over-scrupulous about what they filched. Attitudes have changed. Over the last decade Robert Allison has been preparing a catalogue of the library of Philotheou; his paper shows how much can be learnt for liturgical history, on the one hand, and codicology, on the other, from a careful examination of the holdings of even a modest monastic collection. The large number of menaia preserved at Philotheou, for example, document the history of the services in that monastery since its foundation in 1141.

            But the Holy Mountain, a haven of Orthodoxy, has never been the preserve of any one national group. The final set of papers looks at ÔAthos beyond AthosÕ. Bernadette Martin-Hisard shows how the monastery of Iviron (the Georgian monastery) stands at a cross-roads for the complex interactions between Constantinople and the Caucasus region in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. Virgil C‰ndea discusses the Romanian presence, how the rulers of the Danubian principalities took over the role of monastic patron from Byzantine aristocrats until in the mid-nineteenth century they had become the principal financial prop of the Eastern Church. Paschalis Kitromilides contextualizes the eighteenth-century educational reforms in Athos within the Greek Enlightenment. He argues that, although the Athonite Academy proved an abortive venture, it none the less fuelled Greek nationalist thinking which, as he notes ambivalently, came ultimately to eclipse Athos and the Orthodoxy that had fuelled it.

            The collection ends with KitromilidesÕs final sombre note: are recent nationalist tensions again to be reflected within the Holy Mountain? Surely not. But his remarks point up the constant paradox that this repository of Christian widsom has shown over the centuries a persistent interplay with the secular powersÑthe revolutionary sub-text.

            One of the signs of a fruitful conference is the buzz that it generates in the corridors; the mark of the successful publication of such a conference is the number of questions it raises and leaves unanswered. From a ByzantinistÕs viewpoint it would be good in the future to see further exploration of libraries along the lines taken by Robert Allison; much remains to be discovered about liturgical developments on the Holy Mountain; it would be useful to see the roles and activities of alumni of the Athonite Academy further teased out; much more can be said about the paintings and decoration of the buildings. But this is carping: the convenors, editors, and speakers at this symposium are to be congratulated that so much was covered and has now been made available. The Friends of Mount Athos are urged to acquire their own copies and make their own discoveries.

 

ELIZABETH JEFFREYS

Oxford

 

 

 



[1]  This book is available to members of the Friends at the special price of £30.00 (incl. p&p). Cheques should be made payable to the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies and sent to Dr Mary Cunningham, 44 Church Street, Littleover, Derby DE23 6GD.