Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies

The Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies is the only research centre in the UK which brings all these subjects together within a single unit.

A strong postgraduate and postdoctoral community reinforces our active and varied research culture.

The Centre's staff cover between them a wide range of fields and expertise in respect of both the history and the languages of the East Mediterranean region, including: late Roman and early, middle and late Byzantine history, culture and archaeology, Islamic history of the medieval and modern periods; Turkish and central Asian history from the early medieval to modern period; Balkan, particularly Greek, history up to the present day; international relations, particularly between the Great Powers and Balkan and Near Eastern States from the mid-nineteenth century; and modern Greek literature and culture.

A common focus to the work of the Centre is provided by a fortnightly General Seminar, which attracts leading international scholars. The Centre also acts as host on a three-year rotating basis to the International Symposium on Byzantine Studies, and regularly hosts the annual Research Colloquium of the Society for Modern Greek Studies.

The Centre also edits the bi-annual journal Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, the monograph series Birmingham Byzantine and Ottoman Monographs, and a series of English translations of Modern Greek writers.

Academic staff

Honorary and Emeritus staff

History of the Centre

Birmingham Byzantine Studies were launched in 1965 through the initiative of Sir Ellis Waterhouse, Director of the Barber Institute between 1952 and 1970.

He created a Committee of Byzantine Studies (Com. BS) with the limited remit of establishing the Byzantine field as an academic subject at the postgraduate level. Both the ancient and modern Greek languages had been taught at the university since 1937 with the arrival of George Thomson.

It was not until nearly the end of his career in 1965 that the decision to launch Byzantine studies as a separate academic enterprise was taken. In 1976 the initial success of the Byzantine programme was marked by the creation of a Centre for Byzantine Studies (CBS) and in the years 1976-1984 the centre operated separately from Modern Greek Studies until their merger led to the renaming of the joint enterprise as the Centre for Byzantine Studies and Modern Greek (CBS & MG). This joining of forces and linking of interests had already begun to take shape in 1975 with the establishment of a new journal called Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies (BMGS) linking the two subject areas. At the same time (i.e, in the year 1984) the centre’s academic profile was expanded to include Ottoman Studies with the intention it should provide the bridging element between the study of the Greek world of the Balkans, Asia Minor and beyond between the end of the medieval period and the beginning of the modern era. 1988 marked the year both of the transferring of the permanent editorial home of the journal BMGS to Birmingham and the final renaming of the Centre as CBOMGS, the Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies.

Note: this account is loosely organized around the sketch supplied by the founder and long-serving first director of the Centre Anthony Bryer (OBE), Professor Emeritus of Byzantine Studies at the University of Birmingham in Volume 12 of the journal Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies for the year 1988. See in particular pp. 21-22 and the title page which (for the first time) announces the affiliation of the journal with the newly created Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies.

Mission of the Centre

  • to unite and support the cross-fertilisation of all subjects relating to the study of the east Mediterranean world from late antiquity to the present
  • to provide a stimulating environment for cross-disciplinary research and inter-cultural dialogue for the wider research community and to offer advanced training in the fields of Byzantine, Ottoman, Modern Greek and Modern East Mediterranean studies for a strong international body of research students with diverse interests
  • to promote the scholarly study of the areas of research competence and expertise represented in the Centre’s current membership through the organisation and convening of seminars, symposia, colloquia and conferences for the benefit of our own students and for the wider public
  • to contribute to the expansion and development of knowledge through the Centre’s specialised research publications

Postgraduate courses

As well as the programmes listed below you can also study Byzantine studies as part of the MA History (Medieval and Early Modern History) degree.

Research

Our research covers the east Mediterranean, the Balkans and the Middle East across a wide range of disciplines, historical periods and divergent cultural traditions. We provide a stimulating and supportive research environment for postgraduate study. 

The Centre’s world-class publications include the journal Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies and the series Birmingham Modern Greek Translations and Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Monographs.

The Centre has hosted major international conferences and symposia, such as Imperial Legacies in Cross-Cultural Mediterranean Context (co-organized with the Research Centre for Anatolian Civilizations at Koç University, Istanbul), and regularly hosts the Byzantine Spring Symposium, initiated at Birmingham by the founder of the Centre, Professor Anthony Bryer, in 1968. The most recent Symposia have been the 43rd, Byzantium behind the Scenes: Power and Subversion in March 2010; the 46th, Byzantine Greece: Microcosm of Empire? in March 2013; and the 50th Anniversary Symposium, Global Byzantium, in March 2017. The conference proceedings are published by Routledge for the Society for the Promotion of Byzantine Studies.

Our staff publish a wide range of books, chapters and journal papers. For more information on these please see the individuals' staff page.

Doctoral students at the Centre pursue innovative research in a variety of topics in Byzantine studies, Ottoman studies, and Modern Greek studies. They meet weekly in their dedicated research group, Gateway to the Eastern Mediterranean (GEM) and organise an international colloquium in late May, the annual Postgraduate Research Colloquium of the Centre for Byzantine, Ottoman and Modern Greek Studies, where they and other postgraduates across the world have the opportunity to present their work. This is the oldest Byzantine postgraduate conference in Europe.

Students have also initiated large collaborative research projects, such as the Syropoulos Project on the translation and study of the key Byzantine account of the Council of Ferrara-Florence (1438-39), published in the Birmingham Byzantine and Ottoman Series. Graduate alumni and alumnae of the Centre hold prestigious academic and other professional positions throughout the world.

Postdoctoral students associated with the Centre include Marie Curie Fellows and British Academy Postdoctoral Fellows.

Publications

Monographs

  • Traditional Pottery and Potters in Cyprus
    Ioannis Ionas, Cyprus Ministry of Education, Cyprus; Published April 2001; Hardback; ISBN 978-0-7546-0323-8
  • Theophylact of Ochrid
    Margaret Mullett, Queen's University Belfast, Northern Ireland, UK; Published October 1997; Hardback; ISBN 978-0-86078-549-1
  • La Vie d'Etienne le Jeune par Étienne le Diacre
    Marie-France Auzépy, Université de Paris VIII, France; Published June 1997; Hardback; ISBN 978-0-86078-637-5
  • The Early Byzantine Churches of Cilicia and Isauria
    Stephen Hill, University of Warwick, UK; Published April 1996; Hardback; ISBN 978-0-86078-607-8

All titles can be ordered from the Routledge website.

Birmingham Modern Greek Translations

Thanasis Valtinos, The Last Varlamis

Trans. Stathis Gauntlett, 2016.
ISBN: 978-0-7044-2860-7

The name 'Varlamis' summons forth a shadowy figure from the margins of modern Greek history — the curiously recumbent protagonist of a brigand ballad of dubious authenticity. Thanasis Valtinos is clearly in his artistic element using such raw ingredients. His construction of a trajectory for the fabled bloodline from the first to the eponymous last Varlamis is a bravura performance of his trademark 'faction', an unsettling hybrid of fiction and what passes for historical fact. The Last Varlamis is an entertaining and richly nuanced tale of opportunism, lust, brutality and artistic creativity spun upon the frame of selected scenes of modern Greek history. While the narrative affects the sobriety of scholarly discourse, it violates the basic tenets of historiography with varying degrees of subtlety, as if to strike a blow for the recognition of historical memory as a function of the creative imagination.

Yannis Skarimbas, Mariambas

Trans. Leo Marshall, 2015.
Recipient of Greek State Literary Translation Prize
ISBN 978-0-7044-2851-5

Skarimbas's voice is unique in European fiction, as unique and inimitable as Laurence Sterne's. Mariambasis an account of the events leading up to a suicide, but one quite consciously unlike any in the great novels of the nineteenth century: Mysteries, Madame Bovary, Anna Karenina. With its complicated chronology, its interlocking embedded narratives, its shifts of register and narrative perspective, its stylistic pastiches and parodies, its plot mechanism as intricate, as funny and distressing, as a Feydeau farce, it subverts the tragic coherence of life in nineteenth century fiction. For Skarimbas life is too complicated, has woven into it too many incongruous strands, ever simply to seem empty. It seems, like the moon in Mariambas, to be mostly half full; and therein lies tragedy, but also comedy, enough.

Elias Maglinis, The Interrogation

Trans. Patricia Felisa Barbeito, 2013.

Recipient of the Constantinides Memorial Translation Prize awarded by the Modern Greek Studies Association (USA)

Kostis, a retired journalist-translator, refuses to talk about his past. A former dissident during the junta era in Greece, he was arrested and severely tortured by the military police (the notorious ESA). These experiences continue to haunt him: they shape his most intimate relationships and the regular nightmares that jolt him awake. His artist daughter, Marina — an acolyte of the ‘grandmother’ of performance art, Marina Abramovic — believes in the transformative power of confrontation: ‘Let it all out, dad,’ she admonishes him. She uses self-mutilation as a form of expression and a means of getting her father to lay to rest this past.

In these characters’ attempts to find a common ground and a resolution to their family’s pain, the novel charts the decades of violence unleashed by the polarized struggle between the right and left in Greece. Set in Athens at the turn of the twenty-first century, The Interrogation focuses on the fraught relationship between a father and daughter haunted by a traumatic legacy.

C.P. Cavafy, Selected Prose Works

Trans. Peter Jeffreys (published by The University of Michigan Press with the cooperation and aid of the series) 2010.

Constantine Cavafy (1863–1933) is arguably the most important modern poet of Greece and Greek culture. Long a resident of Egypt and then Constantinople, Cavafy in his poems and prose works tended to focus on Greco-Roman antiquity, on Greece's national identity, and on personal and mythological images and themes including his ethnicity and sexual identity. He wrote some 150 poems, plus a few works in collaboration with his brother John.

His poetical works have been much translated and discussed, but until now, very little consideration has been given to his prose works, in part because many remained untranslated from the original Greek. This book collects Cavafy's more interesting prose pieces and translates those that originally appeared in Greek.

Michel Fais, From the Same Glass and Other Stories

Trans. Jane Nisselson Assimakopoulos, 2007
ISBN 0704425718.

The stories in this award-winning collection depict life and its upheavals in the newly re-aligned ethnic checkerboard of pre-millennium Greece. Faïs’s artistry, at once exquisite and crude, takes the reader on an intense journey through alternate bouts of rage, panic, self-deprecation, lust and melancholy, as mirrored in the mindscapes of natives and immigrants alike. He is equally adept at the short narrative story form as at a minimalist novella, a monologue, a one-act play, a diary or a series of journalistic notes, all of which here coalesce into a symphonic whole themed around the (living) dead and the dying—inhabitants of a world forever changed.

Kostas Karyotakis, Battered Guitars: Poems and Prose

Trans. William W. Reader & Keith Taylor, 2006
ISBN 070442519X.

The early decades of the twentieth century were particularly chaotic in Greece, but gave rise to the major work of Kostas Karyotakis (1896-1928), a poetry both lush and precise, both tragic and ironic. Sometimes considered post-Romantic or an heir to the symbolists, sometimes as either a modernist or a pre-cursor of the post-modern, Karyotakis fits uneasily into our categories. He created an art that, though rooted in the personal and the political, moves far beyond the boundaries of his own life and time. In this work poetry is the necessary but reluctant, almost involuntary response to the swirl around us. “We are just some battered guitars,” he wrote. “When the wind blows over us,/it awakens verses and dissonant sounds/on strings that droop like watch chains.”

Menis Koumandareas, Their Smell Makes me Want to Cry

Trans. Patricia Felisa Barbeito & Vangelis Calotychos, 2004
ISBN 0704424258

A “man’s man” with a curiosity for the perverse, Euripides has the sympathetic eye of one who has faced others’ passions, foibles, and biases up close, in his barber shop mirror. A type of secular confessor, Euripides “lightens” his customers’ soul by cropping their heads into a uniform short-back-and-sides and filtering their lives through a well-worn irony and working class ideology. The reader is invited to inhabit the space between Euripides and his customers, and to reflect on his or her own perspectives on the human drama that unfolds in this corner of a rapidly changing, urban Athens, a place of magical and deadly transformations. Where individuals from vastly different backgrounds are thrown together to comment on ignorance, compassion, guilt, death, illness, illicit desire, immigration, cannibalism - and share their pain, even if only in a glance or in hushed acknowledgment.

From the pen of one of Greece’s most celebrated novelists, nine magical short stories, in which - to echo Pablo Neruda - the smell of their barbers’ shops makes us want to cry….

OUT OF PRINT

Sotiris Dimitriou, May Your Name Be Blessed

Trans. Leo Marshall, 2000
ISBN 0704421895 (Out of print)

May Your Name Be Blessed consists of three interlocking narratives in all of which the surge is present of the great tides that have raced through Balkan history in the last sixty years, but reflected in the mirror of a rural dialect. In this, the boundaries between personal and collective tragedy become blurred, and each is invested with the properties of the other. Death and old age come to be felt as part of the tragic passing of a whole world, and the passing of a whole world as carrying within it all the accumulated pathos of each and every death. The result is a work quite unlike any other; rarely does one find such poignancy and tragic weight combined.

Stratis Doukas, A Prisoner of War’s Story

Trans. Petro Alexiou, 1999

ISBN 0 7044 8570 2 (Out of print)

Doukas's story is one of the most powerful literary accounts of the ordeal of those Greeks who were unable to escape in time across the Aegean to mainland Greece after the Greek-Turkish war of 1922. Acclaimed for its oral simplicity and captivating narrative qualities, it is the story of Nikolas Kozakoglou, an Anatolian Greek prisoner of war, who escapes death by pretending to be a Muslim. His story is one of survival, not heroism, hatred or revenge. It is a testimony to sheer human versatility and resilience and indirectly reveals how, although Greeks and Turks lived together on the whole peacefully in earlier times, they also remained deeply ignorant and suspicious of each other’s religious practice. A Prisoner of War’s Story can be seen as an episode of a larger epic, blurring the distinction between fact and fiction, legend and history

Haris Vlavianos, Adieu

Trans. David Connolly, 1998
ISBN 0 7044 1886 X

Haris Vlavianos (born 1957) is one of the finest and most prolific of contemporary Greek poets. In 1983 he published his first collection of poetry and since then has published five more collections, a book of aphorisms on poetry (the form of Wallace Stevens's Adagia which he has translated), and a number of translations of leading poets including: Walt Whitman, Ezra Pound, John Ashbery, William Blake. He also edits the biannual journal Poetry, which publishes Greek poetry, articles reviews and essays on poetry as well as translations of foreign poets.

Adieuis his most recent collection, published in 1996. It is a lyric farewell to his family, particularly to his mother, to his student life at Oxford and his past as a whole. By conversing with beloved persons, places and poetic voices of the past, it represents a rethinking and a reassessment of love, of poetry and of the human condition. The four sections of this collection represent the stages of Vlavianos's development from a difficult childhood to poetic maturity. It is as if poetry compensates him for the disintegration of his family and at the same time emerges as the positive outcome of this traumatic alienation.

Dimitris Hatzis The End of Our Small Town

Trans. David Vere, 1995
ISBN 0 7044 1609 3

Through the experiences of the characters in these seven interrelated stories Dimitris Hatzis portrays the life of a provincial town in north-eastern Greece during the interwar period and partly during the Occupation. As more traditional modes of living give way before the onset of modem innovations the impact such changes have on his characters is the author’s central concern. In this respect, this particular community stands for all communities exposed to the inevitability of change and the altered ways of thinking that ensue. Whilst he willingly embraces the new, the teller of these humane tales cannot simultaneously help regretting the passing of the old, and this tension characterises much of the book and contributes to its special feeling.


For more information, please contact the General Editor Professor Dimitris Tziovas. Email: d.p.tziovas@bham.ac.uk

2024/25 seminar series

23 October (Arts LT1), 16:00

  • New voices: recent graduates of the Centre
  • Dr Lluís Jerez i Bertolín (Birmingham)
  • The harvest contractor in Byzantium: absence of evidence or evidence of absence?
  • Followed by CESMA social

20 November (online), 16:00

  • Dr Alex Feldman (Madrid)
  • Mercantilism: from the Byzantine Commonwealth to the Commonwealth of Independent States

11 December (Arts LT7), 16:00

  • Dr Victoria Leonard (Coventry)
  • ‘Letters, Resource Distribution, and Gender in the Late Antique Mediterranean’
  • Joint CAHA and CBOMGS seminar