Theophanes presents his book to the Virgin Hodegetria; Painted vellum manuscript. Felton Bequest 1960 710-2; with permission from the National Gallery of Victoria

The Australian Association for Byzantine Studies is 21!! Greetings for our coming of age were received from Macquarie University, the hosts of our recent conference. For a reflection on the last twenty-one years see Ann Moffatt's report below.

Recognition of the quality of Australian scholarship in Byzantine studies has again been demonstrated with the presentation by the Greek Government of an Aristotle Award to our President, John Melville-Jones. John received the award at a ceremony held in Thessaloniki in October. The awards are presented each year to three academics, one each from North America, Europe, and the rest of the world, in recognition of their activities towards the promotion of Hellenism. In his speech of acceptance, John mentioned the Australian Association for Byzantine Studies, emphasising that he received the award on behalf of the association, in addition to accepting it personally.

Pauline Allen has just been awarded a second ARC Large Grant to continue her project "The bishop as letter-writer: pastoral care and civic administration in Christian antiquity". In this phase of the project the letters of Cyprian of Carthage will be analysed by Geoffrey Dunn and the Coptic and Arabic letters and Greek fragments of Severus of Antioch will be collated and analysed by Youhanna Nessim Youssef.

The theme of the Twelfth Conference of the Australian Association for Byzantine Studies, to be held in Perth in 2001, has yet to be decided. Suggestions thus far are: "The Concept of Empire in Byzantium through the Centuries", and "Byzantium and the West". Any further suggestions are welcomed. Suggested themes should be communicated to the President, John Melville-Jones or Secretary, Wendy Mayer (see the beginning of the Newsletter for contact details).

For a report and photos of the Eleventh Conference, held recently at Macquarie University in Sydney, see the AABS web site:

The web site now also contains an extensive bibliography of Australian and New Zealand contributions to Byzantine Studies and related fields to 1997.

The bibliography will be updated periodically as data are collected.

Tony Street, medieval Arabic scholar and until recently lecturer in the South and West Asia Centre at the Australian National University, has just taken up a position as Assistant Director of Research in Islamic Studies in the Divinity School, University of Cambridge. Tim Dawson's candidature (see abstract, Newsletter 38) has recently been upgraded from Masters by Research to Doctor of Philosophy. Congratulations, Tony and Tim.

For enquiries regarding volumes appearing in the series Byzantina Australiensia and information on how to order, refer to the AABS web site (http://www.mcauley.acu.edu.au/AABS/). Efforts are under way to revise and reprint the Zosimus volume. The Kaminiates volume is in press as I write and will be released very shortly.

AABS Celebrates Twenty-one Years

Frivolity seemed an appropriate reaction. Twenty-one years, someone said, since the first Australian Byzantine Studies conference and the formation of the Australian Association in 1978. Here we were at our 11th conference and with a monograph series having reached eleven volumes, with more in the pipeline, and now 39 issues of a Newsletter. All of this has kept Australian Byzantinists in touch with each other and colleagues around the world. Now the Newsletter is published electronically, information about AABS is on our website, and conferences have taken on a genuinely international character.

The first conference was held in 1978 as part of the "Medieval Year" programme of the then fledgling Humanities Research Centre at the Australian National University. Professors Ihor Sevcenko and Herbert Hallam were the eminences grises in the front row, encouraging the speakers and stimulating the discussion. Ihor had come as a Visiting Fellow at the HRC and it was he who suggested the papers merited publication and convinced the HRC to publish them as Byzantina Australiensia vol. 1. He also supported our nomination to become a member of the International Association of Byzantine Studies. For this the AABS committee doubles as the National Committee.

How did it all start? In the early 1960s Dick Johnson (in Classics at Melbourne and then ANU) suggested to Roger Scott and Ann Moffatt that they might be interested in research in the field of Byzantine Studies. In 1976 Roger, Ann and Margaret Riddle (Melbourne) all attended the International Congress in Athens, and Michael and Elizabeth Jeffreys arrived in Sydney from England. Given this strength in numbers the five then contacted some twenty or more other Byzantine sympathisers in Australia, both within the universities and beyond, to plan a newsletter, the conference, and the formation of the association.

An early concern was to build up the library holdings. In 1969 the National Library had acquired Speros Vryonis' initial library of over 2,000 titles and published an author/title listing of it in 1978. Most of this material has since been fully integrated into the main National Library collection. It included the Bonn corpus and early runs of a number of serials, many of them published in Greece. The Library maintained the subscriptions to some of these for several years. Meanwhile the university libraries developed their particular strengths over the thousand-year span of Byzantium. Bob Barnes in Classics at ANU was among those who helped coordinate acquisitions.

Byzantine studies are now actively pursued, moving around the nation in anti-clockwise fashion, in Perth, Adelaide, Melbourne, Canberra, Sydney, Armidale and Brisbane. AABS Committee members over the years have been: Pauline Allen, Margaret Carroll, Brian Croke, Lynda Garland, Sasha Grishin, Herbert Hallam, Elizabeth Jeffreys, Michael Jeffreys, Wendy Mayer, John Melville-Jones, Ann Moffatt, John Moorhead, Alanna Nobbs, Margaret Riddle, Roger Scott, and Ahmad Shboul.

We regret, however, the deaths in this time of a number of members: Nicholas Draffin, Herbert Hallam, Bill Jobling, Helen Lindsay, Tony McNicoll, Cynthia Stallman-Pacitti, and Ted Stormon OJ. In 1997 Robert Browning of the University of London died, who had taught and encouraged so many of the Australian Byzantinists, witness the volume of Byzantina Australiensia offered to him as "Maistor" for his 70th birthday in 1984.

By 1981 the Malalas co-operative project to produce a translation of the chronicle, and later a volume of studies, was underway, led by Elizabeth Jeffreys and Roger Scott and with funding from the Australian Research Council. This brought a team of fanatics together in the Jeffreys' house for weekends of hard slog and keen discussion over several years. The Jeffreys' household has for even longer been the distribution and accounts centre for Byzantina Australiensia. Elizabeth's key role in this was acknowledged as we noted with pleasure her move from here to the Bywater and Sotheby chair at Oxford. The celebration of the 21st was a splendid opportunity to thank the Jeffreys who provided the critical mass and determination necessary to set Byzantine Studies in Australia on the map and following a course which has proven to be sound.

Ann Moffatt, Australian National University

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