835
Travel depictions are widely represented in the saints’ lives of Mid-Byzantine period, thus
there is vast material to explore. My work is based on 37 hagiographic texts, most of which are
saints’ vitae, with several translation taken into consideration as well.
It is traditionally believed that the travels in Byzantine hagiography are basically represented
in a sketchy way. Alexander Kazhdan associated this peculiarity with the Byzantine writers’ general
endeavor to express the idea of stability, which made them describe the travel not as a process, but as
a pair of two static conditions: the moments of departure and of arrival. However, we try to argue that
Kazhdan’s statement was not completely true for different stages of the literary process development.
The earliest chosen texts, vitae of SS. Theodore of Edessa (BHG 1744) and of Gregory of
Agrigentum (BHG 707), comprise rather distant journeys, but the hagiographers tend to present
merely the main points of the saints’ routes without adding many details on the process of the travel.
A few episodes where we can take a closer look at the heroes moving are caused by the authors’ need
to organise the plot or to mention the supernatural forces of their saints in overcoming versatile
perils on the sea or on the road.
The 9
th
, 10
th
and the first half of the 11
th
centuries were a flourishing period in the history of
hagiography, and we inherited a considerable number of texts from those times. On the one hand, the
authors continue to use travelling opportunities for the same purposes as in the earlier vitae, but on
the other hand, some of them appear to pay more attention to the travel itself. The vitae of SS. Gregory
of Decapolis (BHG 711), Gregentios (BHG 698), Theoktista of Lesbos (BHG 1723), Nicon Metanoite
(BHG 1366), Lazaros of Galesion (BHG 979) demonstrate a highly increased volume of the travel
episodes, and in many cases they turn into a picturesque ekphrasis. Moreover, we can spot a certain
tendency looking through a number of travel dangers and difficulties described in later narratives.
Miracles seem to lose their priority, giving way to more realistic methods of problem solving.
The tendency develops in the 12
th
c., when the hagiographers enrich their travel narrative with
the emotions of the travellers and some features of their personal perception. In this respect, vitae
of Cyrillos Phileotes (BHG 468) and Leontios of Jerusalem (BHG 985) have something in common
with the travel accounts, which appeared in the Byzantine literature in the 12
th
c.: the pilgrimage
story of Ioannes Phocas, the poem of Constantine Manasses, letters of Nicholas Mesarites and
Gregory of Antioch.
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