Nikephoros, Patriarch of Constantinople
Nikephoros, Patriarch of Constantinople
By: Cyril Mango
This history covers the period 602–769 and is one of the two Greek historical texts that relate the fortunes of the Byzantine Empire and its neighbors during that difficult period.
Title information
The Short History or Breviarium of Nikephoros, patriarch of Constantinople (d. 828), covers the period 602–769 and is one of the two Greek historical texts that relate the fortunes of the Byzantine Empire and its neighbors during that difficult period. Despite its brevity it is, therefore, a source of primary importance for the study of events in medieval eastern Europe and the Near East, including the dramatic reign of Emperor Herakleios (610–641), the Arab conquests, the establishment of the Bulgarian state, and Byzantine iconoclasm. Not being an eyewitness to the events he describes, Nikephoros had to rely on earlier sources, now lost to us, which he paraphrastically rendered in ancient Greek so as to attain the stylistic elegance that was expected of a “history.”
The English translation is accompanied by a succinct commentary that sets out the basic problems posed by the Short History and provides essential guidance for the reader.
Cyril Mango
Cyril Mango is a scholar of the history, art, and architecture of the Byzantine Empire. He is Emeritus Professor of Byzantine and Modern Greek Language and Literature, University of Oxford.