Araştırma Makalesi
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A NEW FRONTIER: INTEGRATING ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY INTO BYZANTINE STUDIES

Yıl 2025, Sayı: 29, 180 - 189, 30.04.2025
https://doi.org/10.29029/busbed.1485049

Öz

This article aims to trace the historical development of environmental history and its integration into Byzantine studies. It explores the reciprocal relationship between human societies and the environment throughout history, highlighting how human actions have shaped and been shaped by ecological processes. Beginning with an overview of environmental history's emergence as a distinct field in the late 20th century, the article examines the debates and challenges faced by early environmental historians in defining the scope and methodology of the discipline. It then focuses on the gradual incorporation of environmental perspectives into Byzantine scholarship, highlighting key themes such as climate history, human impacts on the environment, and cultural perceptions of nature. Through a multidisciplinary approach that combines historical analysis with insights from natural sciences, archaeology, and interdisciplinary theories, scholars have begun to uncover the complex interactions between Byzantine society and its natural surroundings. By interrogating historical sources and employing innovative methodologies, this article demonstrates the importance of integrating environmental perspectives into the study of Byzantine history and offers insights into future directions for research in this interdisciplinary field.

Kaynakça

  • Allen, P., & Jeffreys, E. (2017). The sixth century: End or beginning? Brill.
  • Arjava, A. (2005). The mystery cloud of 536 CE in the Mediterranean sources. Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 59, 73-94.
  • Arnold, E. (2008). An introduction to medieval environmental history. History Compass, 6(3), 898-916.
  • Attfield, R. (1983). Christian attitudes to nature. Journal of the History of Ideas, 44(3), 369-386.
  • Bartlett, R. (2015). The making of Europe: Conquest, colonization and cultural change 950-1350. Princeton University Press.
  • Bono, P., Crow, J., & Bayliss, R. (2001). The water supply of Constantinople: Archaeology and hydrogeology of an Early Medieval city. Environmental Geology, 40(11-12), 1325-1333.
  • Bottema, S. (1990). Man's role in the shaping of the Eastern Mediterranean landscape: Proceedings of the INQUA/BAI Symposium on the Impact of Ancient Man on the Landscape of the Eastern Mediterranean Region and the Near East: Groningen, Netherlands, 6-9 March 1989. Balkema.
  • Brazdil, R. (2005). Historical climatology in Europe - The state of the art. Climatic Change, 70(3), 363-430.
  • Croke, B. (1981). Two early Byzantine earthquakes and their liturgical commemoration. Byzantion, 51, 122-147.
  • Crow, J., Bardill, J., & Bayliss, R. (2008). The water supply of Byzantine Constantinople. Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies.
  • Degryse, P. (2004). Statistical treatment of trace element data from modern and ancient animal bone: Evaluation of Roman and Byzantine environmental pollution. Analytical Letters, 37(13), 2819-2834.
  • Dunn, A. (1992). The exploitation and control of woodland and scrubland in the Byzantine world. Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, 16(1), 235-298.
  • Grattan, J. P. (2007). The local and global dimensions of metalliferous pollution derived from a reconstruction of an eight thousand year record of copper smelting and mining at a desert-mountain frontier in southern Jordan. Journal of Archaeological Sciences, 34, 83-110.
  • Guidoboni, E., Comastri, A., & Traina, G. (1994). Catalogue of ancient earthquakes in the Mediterranean area up to the 10th century. Rome.
  • Guidoboni, E., & Comastri, A. (2005). Catalogue of earthquakes and tsunamis in the Mediterranean area from the 11th to the 15th century. Rome.
  • Haldon, J. (2014). The climate and environment of Byzantine Anatolia: Integrating science, history and archaeology. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 43(2), 113-161.
  • Haldon, J., & Rosen, A. (2018). Society and environment in the East Mediterranean ca 300-1800 CE. Problems of resilience, adaptation and transformation. Human Ecology, 46(3), 275-290.
  • Hoffmann, R. (2014). An environmental history of medieval Europe. Cambridge University Press.
  • Hughes, D. (2001). An environmental history of the world. Routledge.
  • Hughes, D. (2005). The Mediterranean: An environmental history. ABC-CLIO.
  • Hunt, C., & El-Rishi, H. (2010). Human paleoecology in the ancient metal-smelting and farming complex in the Wadi Faynan, SW Jordan, at the desert margin in the Middle East. In I. Martini & W. Chesworth (Eds.), Landscapes and societies: Selected cases (pp. 121-134). Springer.
  • Isenberg, A. (2014). Introduction: A new environmental history. In A. Isenberg (Ed.), The Oxford handbook of environmental history (pp. 1-22). Oxford University Press.
  • Izdebski, A. (2015). Exploring Byzantine and Ottoman economic history with the use of palynological data: A quantitative approach. Jahrbuch der Österreichischen Byzantinistik.
  • Koder, J. (2017). Climatic change in the fifth and sixth centuries? In P. Allen & E. Jeffreys (Eds.), The sixth century: End or beginning? Brill.
  • Kula, E. (1998). History of environmental economic thought. Routledge.
  • Laiou, A. (2002). The economic history of Byzantium from the seventh through the fifteenth century (Vol. 1). Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection.
  • Laiou, A., & Morrisson, C. (2007). The Byzantine economy. Cambridge University Press.
  • Little, L. K. (2009). Plague and the end of antiquity: The pandemic of 541-750. Cambridge University Press.
  • Littlewood, A. R., & Maguire, H. (2002). Byzantine garden culture. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection.
  • Martinez-Garcia, M. J. (2005). Heavy metals in human bones in different historical epochs. Science of the Total Environment, 348, 51-72.
  • McCormick, M. (2003-2004). Rats, communication, and plague: Toward an ecological history. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 34, 49-61.
  • McCormick, M. (2012). Climate change during and after the Roman Empire: Reconstructing the past from scientific and historical evidence. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 43(2), 169-220.
  • McNeill, J. (1992). The mountains of the Mediterranean world: An environmental history. Cambridge University Press.
  • Meier, M. (2007). Natural disasters in the Chronographia of John Malalas: Reflections on their function – an initial sketch. In M. Juneja & F. Mauelshagen (Eds.), Coping with natural disasters in pre-industrial societies (pp. 237-266). Los Angeles.
  • Myllyntaus, T. (2001). Environmental history: A new discipline with long traditions. In T. Myllyntas (Ed.), Encountering the past in nature: Essays in environmental history (pp. 1-29). Ohio University Press.
  • Preiser-Kapeller, J. (2011). Complex historical dynamics of crisis: The case of Byzantium. In A. Suppan (Ed.), Krise und Transformation (pp. 69-127). Austrian Academy Press.
  • Price, N. (2012). Twilight of the gods? The “dust veil event” of AD 536 in critical perspective. Antiquity, 86(332), 428-443.
  • Purcell, N. (1996). Rome and the management of water: Environment, culture and power. In G. Shipley & J. Salmon (Eds.), Human landscapes in classical antiquity: Environment and culture (pp. 180-212). London-New York.
  • Sallares, R. (2009). Ecology, evolution, and epidemiology of plague. In L. K. Little (Ed.), Plague and the end of antiquity (pp. 231-289). Cambridge University Press.
  • Stathakopoulos, D. C. (n.d.). Reconstructing the climate of the Byzantine world: State of the problem and case studies. In J. Laszlovszky & P. Szabo (Eds.), People and nature in historical perspective (pp. 241-250).
  • Telelis, I. (2008). Climate fluctuations in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East AD 300-1500 from Byzantine documentary and proxy physical paleoclimatic evidence – A comparison. Jahrbuch der Österreichischen Byzantinistik, 58, 167-207.
  • Telelis, I. (2014). Environmental history and Byzantine studies: A survey of topics and results. In T. Kolias & K. Synellis (Eds.), Aureus: Volume dedicated to professor Evangelos K. Chrysos (pp. xx-xx). National Research Foundation/Institute of Historical Research/Section of Byzantine Research.
  • Telelis, I., & Chrysos, E. (1992). The Byzantine sources as documentary evidence for the reconstruction of historical climate. In B. Frenzel & C. Pfister (Eds.), European climate reconstructed from documentary data: Methods and results (pp. 17-31). Stuttgart-Jena-New York.
  • Worster, D. (1988). Doing environmental history. In D. Worster & A. Crosby (Eds.), The ends of the earth (pp. 289-308). Cambridge University Press.
  • Xoplaki, E., Luterbacher, J., Wagner, S., & Zorita, E. (2018). Modelling climate and societal resilience in the Eastern Mediterranean in the last millennium. Human Ecology, 46(3), 275-290.

YENİ BİR YAKLAŞIM: ÇEVRE TARİHİNİ BİZANS ÇALIŞMALARIYLA BİRLEŞTİRMEK

Yıl 2025, Sayı: 29, 180 - 189, 30.04.2025
https://doi.org/10.29029/busbed.1485049

Öz

Bu makalenin amacı, çevre tarihinin tarihsel gelişiminin ve Bizans çalışmalarına eklemlenmesinin bir izini sürmektedir. İnsan eylemlerinin ekolojik süreçleri nasıl şekillendirdiğini ve bu süreçler tarafından nasıl şekillendirildiğini vurgulayarak, tarih boyunca insan toplumları ve çevre arasındaki karşılıklı ilişkiyi araştırmaktadır. Çevre tarihinin 20. yüzyılın sonlarında ayrı bir alan olarak ortaya çıkışına genel bir bakışla başlayan makale, ilk çevre tarihçilerinin disiplinin kapsamını ve metodolojisini tanımlarken karşılaştıkları tartışmaları ve zorlukları inceliyor. Ardından, iklim tarihi, insanın çevre üzerindeki etkileri ve doğanın kültürel algıları gibi kilit temaları vurgulayarak, çevresel perspektiflerin Bizans çalışmalarına kademeli olarak dahil edilmesine odaklanmaktadır. Tarihsel analizi doğa bilimleri, arkeoloji ve disiplinler arası teorilerden elde edilen bilgilerle birleştiren disiplinler arası bir yaklaşım sayesinde akademisyenler, Bizans toplumu ile doğal çevresi arasındaki karmaşık etkileşimleri ortaya çıkarmaya başlamıştır. Bu makale, tarihsel kaynakları sorgulayarak ve yenilikçi metodolojiler kullanarak, çevresel perspektifleri Bizans tarihi çalışmalarına dahil etmenin önemini ortaya koymakta ve bu disiplinlerarası alandaki araştırmalar için gelecekteki yönelimlere dair fikirler sunmaktadır.

Kaynakça

  • Allen, P., & Jeffreys, E. (2017). The sixth century: End or beginning? Brill.
  • Arjava, A. (2005). The mystery cloud of 536 CE in the Mediterranean sources. Dumbarton Oaks Papers, 59, 73-94.
  • Arnold, E. (2008). An introduction to medieval environmental history. History Compass, 6(3), 898-916.
  • Attfield, R. (1983). Christian attitudes to nature. Journal of the History of Ideas, 44(3), 369-386.
  • Bartlett, R. (2015). The making of Europe: Conquest, colonization and cultural change 950-1350. Princeton University Press.
  • Bono, P., Crow, J., & Bayliss, R. (2001). The water supply of Constantinople: Archaeology and hydrogeology of an Early Medieval city. Environmental Geology, 40(11-12), 1325-1333.
  • Bottema, S. (1990). Man's role in the shaping of the Eastern Mediterranean landscape: Proceedings of the INQUA/BAI Symposium on the Impact of Ancient Man on the Landscape of the Eastern Mediterranean Region and the Near East: Groningen, Netherlands, 6-9 March 1989. Balkema.
  • Brazdil, R. (2005). Historical climatology in Europe - The state of the art. Climatic Change, 70(3), 363-430.
  • Croke, B. (1981). Two early Byzantine earthquakes and their liturgical commemoration. Byzantion, 51, 122-147.
  • Crow, J., Bardill, J., & Bayliss, R. (2008). The water supply of Byzantine Constantinople. Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies.
  • Degryse, P. (2004). Statistical treatment of trace element data from modern and ancient animal bone: Evaluation of Roman and Byzantine environmental pollution. Analytical Letters, 37(13), 2819-2834.
  • Dunn, A. (1992). The exploitation and control of woodland and scrubland in the Byzantine world. Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, 16(1), 235-298.
  • Grattan, J. P. (2007). The local and global dimensions of metalliferous pollution derived from a reconstruction of an eight thousand year record of copper smelting and mining at a desert-mountain frontier in southern Jordan. Journal of Archaeological Sciences, 34, 83-110.
  • Guidoboni, E., Comastri, A., & Traina, G. (1994). Catalogue of ancient earthquakes in the Mediterranean area up to the 10th century. Rome.
  • Guidoboni, E., & Comastri, A. (2005). Catalogue of earthquakes and tsunamis in the Mediterranean area from the 11th to the 15th century. Rome.
  • Haldon, J. (2014). The climate and environment of Byzantine Anatolia: Integrating science, history and archaeology. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 43(2), 113-161.
  • Haldon, J., & Rosen, A. (2018). Society and environment in the East Mediterranean ca 300-1800 CE. Problems of resilience, adaptation and transformation. Human Ecology, 46(3), 275-290.
  • Hoffmann, R. (2014). An environmental history of medieval Europe. Cambridge University Press.
  • Hughes, D. (2001). An environmental history of the world. Routledge.
  • Hughes, D. (2005). The Mediterranean: An environmental history. ABC-CLIO.
  • Hunt, C., & El-Rishi, H. (2010). Human paleoecology in the ancient metal-smelting and farming complex in the Wadi Faynan, SW Jordan, at the desert margin in the Middle East. In I. Martini & W. Chesworth (Eds.), Landscapes and societies: Selected cases (pp. 121-134). Springer.
  • Isenberg, A. (2014). Introduction: A new environmental history. In A. Isenberg (Ed.), The Oxford handbook of environmental history (pp. 1-22). Oxford University Press.
  • Izdebski, A. (2015). Exploring Byzantine and Ottoman economic history with the use of palynological data: A quantitative approach. Jahrbuch der Österreichischen Byzantinistik.
  • Koder, J. (2017). Climatic change in the fifth and sixth centuries? In P. Allen & E. Jeffreys (Eds.), The sixth century: End or beginning? Brill.
  • Kula, E. (1998). History of environmental economic thought. Routledge.
  • Laiou, A. (2002). The economic history of Byzantium from the seventh through the fifteenth century (Vol. 1). Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection.
  • Laiou, A., & Morrisson, C. (2007). The Byzantine economy. Cambridge University Press.
  • Little, L. K. (2009). Plague and the end of antiquity: The pandemic of 541-750. Cambridge University Press.
  • Littlewood, A. R., & Maguire, H. (2002). Byzantine garden culture. Dumbarton Oaks Research Library and Collection.
  • Martinez-Garcia, M. J. (2005). Heavy metals in human bones in different historical epochs. Science of the Total Environment, 348, 51-72.
  • McCormick, M. (2003-2004). Rats, communication, and plague: Toward an ecological history. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 34, 49-61.
  • McCormick, M. (2012). Climate change during and after the Roman Empire: Reconstructing the past from scientific and historical evidence. Journal of Interdisciplinary History, 43(2), 169-220.
  • McNeill, J. (1992). The mountains of the Mediterranean world: An environmental history. Cambridge University Press.
  • Meier, M. (2007). Natural disasters in the Chronographia of John Malalas: Reflections on their function – an initial sketch. In M. Juneja & F. Mauelshagen (Eds.), Coping with natural disasters in pre-industrial societies (pp. 237-266). Los Angeles.
  • Myllyntaus, T. (2001). Environmental history: A new discipline with long traditions. In T. Myllyntas (Ed.), Encountering the past in nature: Essays in environmental history (pp. 1-29). Ohio University Press.
  • Preiser-Kapeller, J. (2011). Complex historical dynamics of crisis: The case of Byzantium. In A. Suppan (Ed.), Krise und Transformation (pp. 69-127). Austrian Academy Press.
  • Price, N. (2012). Twilight of the gods? The “dust veil event” of AD 536 in critical perspective. Antiquity, 86(332), 428-443.
  • Purcell, N. (1996). Rome and the management of water: Environment, culture and power. In G. Shipley & J. Salmon (Eds.), Human landscapes in classical antiquity: Environment and culture (pp. 180-212). London-New York.
  • Sallares, R. (2009). Ecology, evolution, and epidemiology of plague. In L. K. Little (Ed.), Plague and the end of antiquity (pp. 231-289). Cambridge University Press.
  • Stathakopoulos, D. C. (n.d.). Reconstructing the climate of the Byzantine world: State of the problem and case studies. In J. Laszlovszky & P. Szabo (Eds.), People and nature in historical perspective (pp. 241-250).
  • Telelis, I. (2008). Climate fluctuations in the Eastern Mediterranean and the Middle East AD 300-1500 from Byzantine documentary and proxy physical paleoclimatic evidence – A comparison. Jahrbuch der Österreichischen Byzantinistik, 58, 167-207.
  • Telelis, I. (2014). Environmental history and Byzantine studies: A survey of topics and results. In T. Kolias & K. Synellis (Eds.), Aureus: Volume dedicated to professor Evangelos K. Chrysos (pp. xx-xx). National Research Foundation/Institute of Historical Research/Section of Byzantine Research.
  • Telelis, I., & Chrysos, E. (1992). The Byzantine sources as documentary evidence for the reconstruction of historical climate. In B. Frenzel & C. Pfister (Eds.), European climate reconstructed from documentary data: Methods and results (pp. 17-31). Stuttgart-Jena-New York.
  • Worster, D. (1988). Doing environmental history. In D. Worster & A. Crosby (Eds.), The ends of the earth (pp. 289-308). Cambridge University Press.
  • Xoplaki, E., Luterbacher, J., Wagner, S., & Zorita, E. (2018). Modelling climate and societal resilience in the Eastern Mediterranean in the last millennium. Human Ecology, 46(3), 275-290.
Toplam 45 adet kaynakça vardır.

Ayrıntılar

Birincil Dil İngilizce
Konular Tarihi Coğrafya
Bölüm Araştırma Makaleleri
Yazarlar

Hüseyin Erkan Bedirhanoğlu 0000-0002-8980-6267

Erken Görünüm Tarihi 28 Nisan 2025
Yayımlanma Tarihi 30 Nisan 2025
Gönderilme Tarihi 16 Mayıs 2024
Kabul Tarihi 13 Aralık 2024
Yayımlandığı Sayı Yıl 2025 Sayı: 29

Kaynak Göster

APA Bedirhanoğlu, H. E. (2025). A NEW FRONTIER: INTEGRATING ENVIRONMENTAL HISTORY INTO BYZANTINE STUDIES. Bingöl Üniversitesi Sosyal Bilimler Enstitüsü Dergisi(29), 180-189. https://doi.org/10.29029/busbed.1485049