Kassia the Nun c.810-c.865: An Appreciation

Title
Kassia the Nun c.810-c.865: An Appreciation
Publication Date
2006
Author(s)
Silvas, Anna Margaret
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2217-7849
Email: asilvas@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:asilvas
Editor
Editor(s): Garland, Linda
Type of document
Book Chapter
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Ashgate Publishing
Place of publication
Aldershot, United Kingdom
Edition
1
Series
Publications of the Centre for Hellenic Studies, King's College London
UNE publication id
une:1925
Abstract
Kassia, Cassia, Kasia, Kassiane, Eikasia or Ikasia, as her name is variously recorded, was a nun of ninth-century Constantinople and the outstanding poet of the Middle Byzantine period. Among the hundreds of hymnographers in the Eastern Church, only four women are positively identified: Theodosia, Thekla, Kassia and Palaiologina (Topping 1982/83). and of these, only one had her works admitted into the liturgical books: Kassia. She is unique. Moreover, she composed a body of non-liturgical verse, in which she comments on the social life of her times. Furthermore, three letters to her from St Theodore the Studite have survived, giving us a precious glimpse into her early life and character. Lastly, there was the tradition of her appearance in an imperial 'bride-show', which became the stuff of folklore in the following centuries, while the character portrayed in her most famous hymn (treated later in this paper) was applied to her, so that it was thought that she herself had been a 'fallen woman', a misconception corrected by Topping (1981). By revisiting these sources, this paper hopes to present a fresh appreciation of the person of Kassia. How did the spirited, educated, highly gifted woman steer her way in the mid-Byzantine era which she lived? What is the character of her spiritual doctrine? What is her 'theology' of woman?
Link
Citation
Byzantine Women: Varieties of Experience 800-1200, p. 17-39
ISBN
9780754657378
075465737X
Start page
17
End page
39

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