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      Eastern Medieval Architecture : The Building Traditions of Byzantium and Neighboring Lands The Building Traditions of Byzantium and Neighboring Lands 

      New Church Architecture and the Rise of Monasticism

      edited-book
      Oxford University Press

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          Abstract

          By the end of the ninth century, Byzantium emerged from the Transitional Period as a smaller entity, limited for the most part to Turkey, Greece, and the southern Balkans. Society was also transformed, from open to closed, from public to private. A new type of church architecture emerged—small, centralized, and domed (the “cross-in-square” church type)—perfectly suited to the private worship of the family or the small congregation. The church’s spatial organization was matched by the development of a standardized decorative program (in mosaic or fresco) that reflected the hierarchy of Orthodox belief. Monasticism emerged as a major social force, although in contrast to Western Europe, Byzantine monasteries remained relative small, with an organization that resembled that of the household ( oikos).

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          December 12 2019
          September 19 2019
          : 303-331
          10.1093/oso/9780190272739.003.0014
          00129b6b-f7a8-4461-a2c9-bd065f457f84
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