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Land and Privilege in Byzantium
The Institution of Pronoia

The first comprehensive analysis for over fifty years of pronoia and its importance in the history of later Byzantium.

Mark C. Bartusis (Author)

9781107009622, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 3 January 2013

742 pages, 9 b/w illus. 5 maps 22 tables
25.2 x 18.2 x 4.4 cm, 1.47 kg

A pronoia was a type of conditional grant from the emperor, often to soldiers, of various properties and privileges. In large measure the institution of pronoia characterized social and economic relations in later Byzantium, and its study is the study of later Byzantium. Filling the need for a comprehensive study of the institution, this book examines the origin, evolution and characteristics of pronoia, focusing particularly on the later thirteenth and fourteenth centuries. But the book is much more than a study of a single institution. With a broad chronological scope extending from the mid-tenth to the mid-fifteenth century, it incorporates the latest understanding of Byzantine agrarian relations, taxation, administration and the economy, as it deals with relations between the emperor, monastic and lay landholders, including soldiers and peasants. Particular attention is paid to the relation between the pronoia and Western European, Slavic and Middle Eastern institutions, especially the Ottoman timar.

Introduction
1. The non-technical senses of the word pronoia
2. Pronoia during the twelfth century
3. Choniates' 'gifts of Paroikoi'
4. Origins
5. Pronoia during the Period of Exile (1204–1261)
6. Pronoia during the era of Michael VIII Palaiologos
7. Terminology, late thirteenth and fourteenth centuries
8. The nature of pronoia, late thirteenth and fourteenth centuries: a handbook in three parts
9. Pronoia during the later fourteenth and fifteenth centuries
10. Pronoia and timar
Conclusion
Appendices.

Subject Areas: Economic history [KCZ], Early history: c 500 to c 1450/1500 [HBLC], European history [HBJD]

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