Embassies - Negotiations - Gifts : Systems of East Roman Diplomacy in Late Antiquity. Dissertationsschrift (Geographica Historica 30) (2014. 306 p. 240 mm)

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Embassies - Negotiations - Gifts : Systems of East Roman Diplomacy in Late Antiquity. Dissertationsschrift (Geographica Historica 30) (2014. 306 p. 240 mm)

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 306 p.
  • 言語 ENG,ENG
  • 商品コード 9783515106320

Description


(Text)
This book offers an original approach to late Roman/early Byzantine diplomacy as a system. Assessing both official and clandestine perspectives, Ekaterina Nechaeva examines the working mechanisms of this diplomatic machine and reveals the 'block' organization of embassies as a basic feature of international communication. Negotiations were split into several phases and accompanied by elaborate protocol and rich ceremony. Gift exchange and the distribution of insignia comprised a vital part of the diplomatic process. What were the semantics of these symbolic acts? The study accents the status significance of such donations. Ambassadors, who embodied high-level diplomacy, delivered gifts, led talks, and mediated international dialogue. Who were these envoys? How dangerous and adventurous were their missions? What were these expeditions like? How did they travel and how far? Nechaeva scrutinizes these and further questions by investigating the practices of ambassadorial business. Throughout the book the analysis of secret negotiations, the intelligence system and spy activities of envoys, plots and political murders reveals the shadowy side of diplomacy.
(Review)
"N. provides an encompassing and in-depth survey of the evidence for the mechanisms of late antique diplomacy, which will be of immense use for every future study on the topic." Wolfgang Havener Ancient West and East 15, 2016 20190905
(Author portrait)
Ekaterina Nechaeva completed her PhD at the University of Siena in 2007 after graduating from the Saint-Petersburg State University. She is currently a Research Fellow in Byzantine Studies at Dumbarton Oaks/Harvard University. After a long career at the State Hermitage museum, she now lives in Rome where she is associated with the American Academy in Rome. Her current project is on 'defection and freedom' in the Late Antique world, with a focus on individuals who fled, deserted, or permanently left the Roman Empire.

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