Geoponika

Farm work : a modern translation of the Roman and Byzantine farming handbook

by Translated by Andrew Darby, Classical and Food Historian

Geoponika is one of the most celebrated texts to come out of the Byzantine renaissance promoted by the 10th-century emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus. It was a gathering together of many classical and post-classical agricultural works, from Pliny in ancient Rome to the 7th-century Cassianus Bassus and the 4th-century Vindonius Anatolius. Many of these no longer survive, making this work the more valuable. It is a source both for ancient Roman agricultural practice in the West, and for understanding Near Eastern agriculture and what went on in Byzantine Anatolia. It was once translated into English, in the early 19th century, but has usually only been accessible to scholars of Greek. The history of the manuscript is extremely complicated. Andrew Dalby provides a modern and intelligent translation. He does not explore in any detail textual matters, wishing to concentrate on questions of agriculture and food production (meanwhile a definitive Greek text is in preparation elsewhere). This will be an essential tool for students of the classical and medieval worlds.

ISBN (Hardback) 9781903018699
Price (Hardback) £50.00/$60.00
Publication 2006
Pages 368
Size 234 x 156mm
Readership scholars

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Metadata

  • isbn
    9781903018699 (Hardback)
  • original publisher
    Prospect Books
  • original publisher place
    London
  • publisher
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.
  • publisher place
    Sheffield (U.K.)
  • rights holder
    Equinox Publishing Ltd.