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<article dtd-version="1.1" article-type="book-review">
  <front>
    <journal-meta>
      <journal-id>TMR</journal-id>
      <journal-title-group>
        <journal-title>The Medieval Review</journal-title>
      </journal-title-group>
      <issn pub-type="epub">1096-746X</issn>
      <publisher>
        <publisher-name>Indiana University</publisher-name>
      </publisher>
    </journal-meta>
    <article-meta>
      <article-id pub-id-type="publisher-id">14.04.04</article-id>
      <title-group>
        <article-title>14.04.04, Bartusis, Land and Privilege in Byzantium (Walter E. Kaegi)</article-title>
      </title-group>
      <contrib-group>
        <contrib contrib-type="author">
          <name>
            <surname>Kaegi</surname>
            <given-names/>
          </name>
          <aff>The University of Chicago</aff>
          <address>
            <email>kwal@uchicago.edu</email>
          </address>
        </contrib>
      </contrib-group>
      <pub-date publication-format="epub" date-type="pub" iso-8601-date="2014">
        <year>2014</year>
      </pub-date>
      <product product-type="book">
        <person-group>
          <name>
            <surname>Bartusis, Mark C.</surname>
            <given-names/>
          </name>
        </person-group>
        <source>Land and Privilege in Byzantium: The Institution of Pronoia, </source>
        <year iso-8601-date="2013">2013</year>
        <publisher-loc>Cambridge</publisher-loc>
        <publisher-name>Cambridge University Press</publisher-name>
        <page-range>Pp. xliv, 697</page-range>
        <price>$170.00</price>
        <isbn>9781107009622</isbn>
      </product>
      <permissions>
        <copyright-statement>Copyright 2014 Trustees of Indiana University. Indiana University provides the information contained in this file for non-commercial, personal, or research use only. All other use, including but not limited to commercial or scholarly reproductions, redistribution, publication or transmission, whether by electronic means or otherwise, without prior written permission of the copyright holder is strictly prohibited.</copyright-statement>
      </permissions>
    </article-meta>
  </front>
  <body>
    <p>
This is a major discussion of and contribution to institutional
history in our present era in which institutional history is not very
fashionable. The principal focus of <italic>Land and Privilege</italic> is on
Byzantine history between the late eleventh and middle of the
fifteenth centuries. Indeed it is a credit to author and publisher
that it was possible to conceive, complete, and publish such a massive
yet polished book on a very difficult subject. It includes ten hefty
chapters in addition to an Introduction and Conclusion. The
organization and subsections of contents are reasonable. Bartusis
distills an enormous amount of research from sifting records. The
geographical scope includes Southeastern Europe, including parts of
today's Greece, Albania, Bosnia, Montenegro, Serbia, FYR Macedonia,
Bulgaria, and Turkey. He also investigates relevant cases in Turkish
Anatolia, but gives greater weight to the southeastern European
conditions, probably because of more citations in the sources. Much
documentation comes from the general vicinity of Thessaloniki and
especially lands with records that survived on Mt. Athos. Some
documents come from Greek islands such as Lemnos and Patmos. 
Documents include praktika, chrysobulls, typika, and letters.
Historians must work with the actual extant documentation. We can
discuss whether these form a representative good sample. Fortunately
Bartusis' investigations profited from the efforts of generations of
French Byzantinists and other scholars who had conduced preliminary
searches of records. This is a propitious time for undertaking a major
evaluation of the problem and related subjects.</p>
    <p>The well planned and well constructed chapters include respectively:
Chapter 1 "The non-technical senses of the word pronoia;" Chapter 2
"Paranoia during the twelfth century;" Chapter 3 "'Choniates' gifts of
paroikoi;" Chapter 4 "Origins;" Chapter 5 "Pronoia during the period
of exile (1204-1261);" Chapter 6 Pronoia during the era of Michael
VIII Palaiologos;" Chapter 7 "Terminology, late thirteenth and
fourteenth centuries;" Chapter 8 "The Nature of Pronoia, ca. 1282-ca.
1371: A Handbook in Three Parts," Part I Receiving the Grant, Part II
Holding the Grant, Part III Relinquishing the Grant;" Chapter 9
"Pronoia in the later fourteenth and fifteenth centuries;" Chapter 10
"Pronoia and timar." There also are five appendices, 22 tables and 5
maps.  Bartusis explains that he "tried to incorporate every piece of
evidence ever cited by anyone as a reference to the Byzantine
institution of pronoia, either to use it to increase our knowledge of
the institution, or to dismiss it as irrelevant or too ambiguous to be
of much use" (10). All of the above-listed chapters are intelligent
but to this reader the most important ones are Chapter 4 and Chapter
8, as well as the polished and tight Conclusion.  Each chapter builds
on its predecessor and leads to the following one in intelligent order
and sequence.</p>
    <p>The author was a student of the late Angeliki Laiou, and of course the
resulting product owes much to her earlier research and guidance.  But
Bartusis developed and brought this book to fruition on his own. He
overcame difficult challenges of his working conditions to gain time
and access to satisfactory research facilities in pursuit of his
objective of completing this excellent book. The author took the
initiative to win several major competitive post-doctoral fellowships
that assisted his research and write-up. He won and used a Fulbright
to Greece to the maximum, as well as pursuing research at Dumbarton
Oaks.  His book is a result of decades of research here in the United
States as well as in Greece and Serbia. A thorough study of pronoia
has been a long-term desideratum for Byzantine studies.  But this book
does more than fill a gap. It is a very original piece of historical
scholarship. There is no comparable study.</p>
    <p>This is an ambitious investigation of the vexed question of the
institution of pronoia. It represents an enormous amount of research,
cross-checking, and synthesization. The author has rigorously
investigated the historical background of the scholarship in multiple
languages, including Serbian and Bulgarian. He also investigates land
taxes whether or not pronoia. The bibliography is thorough. Study of
pronoia necessarily involves probing the old and somewhat misguided
question of feudalism.  The author handles that topic very sensitively
and intelligently.  His historical analysis is careful. Bartusis
offers good explanations of his train of thought and how he arrived at
his reasoned conclusions. He does not attempt to force the sources. 
Where he cannot arrive at a definitive conclusion he candidly
identifies limits. He explains the multiple meanings of pronoia. He
helps to clarify many issues. He readily points out blurry usages in
primary texts.</p>
    <p>Bartusis explains difference between technical and "non-technical"
citations of pronoia. His analysis makes sense.</p>
    <p><italic>Posotes</italic>and its meanings are defined on pp. 245-251 for
quantifying the value of a property: amount of money that represented
the tax that was normally levied on a taxable item or collection of
items if not subject to tax exemption the basic property tax normally
levied on, or the sum of taxes normally levied on collections of items
(245).</p>
    <p>Bartusis traces the origins of pronoia to the eleventh century.  But
he really begins his intensive analysis with the twelfth century.  He
reviews important evidence from the Komnenian dynasty.  He offers
valuable insights on the crucial situation under thirteenth-century
Emperor Michael VIII Paleologus. He extends the chronological scope of
his analysis to the middle of the fifteenth century. His investigation
involves a lot of critical reasoning. He cannot always come to a
definitive simple conclusion. He illuminates important aspects of
institutional and fiscal history of southeastern Europe (not
exclusively Byzantium) between the eleventh and fifteenth century.</p>
    <p>Bartusis' book of course concentrates on pronoia, as it should, but it
also provides a substantially improved synthesized study of internal
conditions between the twelfth and early fifteenth centuries. Readers
derive a different picture of late Byzantium from reading Bartusis
than from the reading narrative accounts and surveys of Donald M.
Nicol or Jonathan Harris on late Byzantium. Despite the mass of
information, the author has organized material so that the reader can
more easily follow his line of thought.</p>
    <p>A word about the relationship of the Byzantine pronoia institution to
another institution, that of the Ottoman timars. It seems to be very
tenuous and uncertain. It deserves scholarly investigation but may
require more consultation with Ottoman institutional specialists. The
problem is that the timar system as we think we know it is not
systematized until the sixteenth century, but everyone, the eminent
Ottoman historian Halil Inalcik included, assumes that it stretches
back at least to the fourteenth century.  This may not be the case,
or, rather, the entire land regime that emerges in the sixteenth
century--when Ottomanists begin to get tax registers in abundance and
with some regularity--seems in important ways significantly different
from that of at least the early fourteenth century, which looks
distinctly "feudal" to some, especially when one examines documents of
endowment.  Sultan Suleyman I was transforming practically everything
into imperial (miri) domain on which the developed timar system was
based.  But it would have been awkward for the author of <italic>Land and
Privilege</italic> to develop part of <italic>Land and Privilege</italic> as a multi-
author study. Bartusis admittedly and prudentially limits himself on
Ottoman institutions, especially the Ottoman timar system. This is a
wise decision, because Byzantinists too often have sought to explain
too many Ottoman institutions in terms of alleged Byzantine origins.
But the issue remains tantalizing, especially because the timar system
is also pretty specific to Rumelia and much of Anatolia, which were
former Byzantine imperial territories; it is never really successfully
implemented any great distance south of Aleppo in Ottoman domains. At
present the relationship of pronoia to timar remains open. There is no
consensus. Nevertheless, <italic>Land and Privilege</italic> will make a
significant contribution not so much by explicit examination of the
relationship of pronoia to timar, but by providing a thorough and
searching review of known documentation and discussion of pronoia in
its southeastern European historical context. <italic>Land and
Privilege</italic> has provided much difficult and valuable spadework for
the Ottomanists, who may now use this evidence as they see best and on
their own terms for reaching their own conclusions concerning the
background for Ottoman timars.</p>
    <p><italic>Land and Privilege</italic> will not solve every controversy and doubt
with respect to late Byzantine rural taxes and land tenure, but it
sets out good categories for more focus.  This book is an enormous
step forward. Bartusis previously wrote an excellent book on the Late
Byzantine Army.  However this is a different book. Concentrating on
pronoia Bartusis explicitly avoids intensive scrutiny of problems of
military finance and military service. This is not a study of Late
Byzantine war-making. It is essential to understanding fiscal, social,
and agrarian structures in late medieval southeastern Europe
irrespective of the borders of the Byzantine Empire. It probably will
be a landmark standard work of reference. This book should be standard
for a long time. This is an achievement. Other positive features of
this book: learned and accurate extensive footnotes. The type fonts
are superb. <italic>Land and Privilege</italic> is handsomely printed. It
contains a very clear and useful glossary, and it is well indexed.  He
reviews extant documentation but does not claim to publish any new
primary sources with one exception.</p>
    <p><italic>Land and Privilege</italic> belongs in libraries of medieval, Byzantine,
Early Modern, Ottoman, southeastern European history, comparative
history, including comparative agrarian and fiscal history. This is a
basic work of reference. It is a fundamental contribution to late
Byzantine history and institutions. The conclusions could be used in
college and university survey courses, but it is too large and too
expensive for classroom use except in the form of excerpts.</p>
    <p/>
  </body>
</article>
