Berger A. (Trad.)
                    Accounts of Medieval Constantinople
                    The Patria
                    A cura di Berger A. (Trad.) - Harvard University Press  Cambridge, Mass. 2013
                    Dumbarton Oaks Medieval Library, Vol. 24
                    
                    The Patria is a fascinating four-book collection of short 
historical notes, stories, and legends about the buildings and monuments
 of Constantinople, compiled in the late tenth century by an anonymous 
author who made ample use of older sources. It also describes the 
foundation and early (pre-Byzantine) history of the city, and includes 
the Narrative on the Construction of Hagia Sophia, a semi-legendary account of Emperor Justinian I’s patronage of this extraordinary church (built between 532 and 537). The Patria
 constitutes a unique record of popular traditions about the city, 
especially its pagan statues, held by its medieval inhabitants. At the 
same time it is the only Medieval Greek text to present a panorama of 
the city as it existed in the middle Byzantine period. Despite its 
problems of historical reliability, the Patria is still one of 
our main guides for the urban history of medieval Constantinople. This 
translation makes the entire text of the Patria accessible in English for the first time.