Cyril Mango

Cyril Alexander Mango (14 April 1928, Istanbul) is a British scholar of the history, art, and architecture of the Byzantine Empire. He is a former King's College London and Oxford professor of Byzantine and Modern Greek Language and Literature. He is the brother of Andrew Mango.

One of his major works, The Mosaics of St. Sophia at Istanbul (1962), details the history of the mosaics of the Hagia Sophia.

Career

Bibliography

  • The Brazen House. A Study of the Vestibule of the Imperial Palace of Constantinople (1959)
  • Mosaics of St.Sophia at Istanbul (1962)
  • The Treasures of Turkey: The earliest civilizations of Anatolia Byzantium the Islamic Period. Cyril Mango, Ekrem Akurgal, and Richard Ettinghausen (1966), Editions d'Art Albert Skira, Geneva, 253 pp.
  • The Art of Byzantine Empire (1972)
  • Byzantine Architecture (1976)
  • Byzantium: The Empire of New Rome (1980) [2]
  • Byzantium and its Image: history and culture of the Byzantine Empire and its heritage (1984)
  • Le développement urbain de Constantinople (IVe - VIIe siècles) (1985)
  • Studies on Constantinople (1993)
  • Hagia Sophia: A Vision for Empires (1997); text by Cyril Mango, photographs by Ahmet Ertuğ
  • Chora: The Scroll of Heaven (2000); text by Cyril Mango, photographs by Ahmet Ertuğ
  • The Oxford History of Byzantium (2002); edited by Cyril Mango[3]

Personal

Mango was born on 14 April 1928 in Istanbul, Turkey, the son of Alexander A. and Adelaide (Damonov) Mango. He married Mabel Grover in 1953, but the marriage ended. He later married Susan A. Gerstel in 1964, but this marriage also ended. Ultimately, he married Marlia Mango in 1976. He has two daughters, one from his marriage to Mabel and one from his marriage to Susan. He graduated from the University of St. Andrews, M.A. in 1949, and from the University of Paris as a Doctor of History in 1953.[1]

References

  1. "Mango, Cyril (Alexander) 1928- - Dictionary definition of Mango, Cyril (Alexander) 1928". www.encyclopedia.com. 2009.
  2. Mango, Cyril (1981). Byzantium : the empire of new Rome. New York: Charles Scribner's Sohns. ISBN 0-684-16768-9.
  3. Mango, Cyril, ed. (2002). The Oxford history of Byzantium (1. publ. ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-814098-3. Archived from the original on 29 August 2005.



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