TY - GEN TY - GEN T1 - The Great Palace in Constantinople : An Architectural Interpretation T2 - Architectural crossroads A1 - Westbrook, Nigel LA - eng PP - Turnhout PB - Brepols YR - 2019 UL - https://kansalliskirjasto.finna.fi/Record/fikka.5459879 AB - The Byzantine Great Palace, located adjacent to the Hagia Sophia, is arguably the most important Western complex to have disappeared from the architectural archive. Despite this absence, it may be argued that the representational halls of the palace--crown halls, basilicas, and reception halls or triclinia--served as models for the ascription of imperial symbolism, and for emulation by rival political centres. In a later phase of its existence, Byzantine emperors, in turn, looked to the example of Islamic palaces in constructing settings for diplomatic exchange. While the Great Palace has been studied through the archaeological record and Byzantine texts, its form remains a matter of conjecture, however in this study, a novel focus upon the operation of ascription of meaning applied to architectural forms, and their emulation in later architecture will enable a sense of how the forms of the palace were understood by their inhabitants and their clients and visiting emissaries. Through comparative analysis of both emulative models and copies, a hypothesis of the layout of the complex, in its physical and social contexts, is proposed. SN - nidottu KW - palatsit KW - Palaces. KW - arkkitehtuuri KW - Architecture KW - Konstantinopoli KW - Constantinople : History ER -