Being poor in Byzantium

Wickham C

This contribution discusses the use of poverty words, in particular ptōchos and penēs, in Byzantium, and how their meanings changed. It surveys the varying experiences of being poor in rural and urban contexts and discusses the representation of poverty in texts from the seventh century to the fourteenth. It also discusses how the poor could confront the powerful, especially in Constantinople, and gives examples of the poor speaking in their own voice, from Anatolia and Cairo.