Series of primary sources for the study of Byzantine history
The Corpus Scriptorum Historiae Byzantinae (CSHB; English: Corpus of Byzantine history writers), also referred to as the Bonn Corpus, is a monumental fifty-volume series of
primary sources for the study of
Byzantine history (
c. 330–1453), published in the German city of
Bonn between 1828 and 1897. Each volume contains a
critical edition of a
Byzantine Greek historical text, accompanied by a parallel
Latin translation. The project, conceived by the historian
Barthold Georg Niebuhr, sought to revise and expand the original twenty-four volume Corpus Byzantinae Historiae (sometimes called the Byzantine du Louvre),[1] published in
Paris between 1648 and 1711 under the initial direction of the
Jesuit scholar
Philippe Labbe.[2] The series was first based at the
University of Bonn; after Niebuhr's death in 1831, however, oversight of the project passed to his collaborator
Immanuel Bekker at the
Prussian Academy of Sciences in
Berlin.[3]
While the first volume of the series received praise for its "minute care and attention" to textual details,[4] later volumes produced under Bekker became infamous for their frequent misprints, careless execution, and general unreliability.[5] Given these shortcomings, the
International Association of Byzantine Studies established in 1966 the Corpus Fontium Historiae Byzantinae to re-edit many of the texts included in the Bonn edition of the CSHB.
^The Life and Letters of Barthold George Niebuhr, ed. K. J. Bunsen, with J. Brandis and J. W. Lorbell (New York: Harper, 1854) p. 483, and letter 364 (pp. 501-502), addressed to
Savigny, dated 29 April 1827: "You will have heard of the edition of the Byzantine historians, which I am superintending. It is a great delight to me to be able thus to infuse some life into our literary doings; to give employment to young philologists; to give extension, activity, and perfection to typography; to contribute my mite [sic] to the increase of general prosperity...."
^"Niebuhr's Edition of the Byzantine Historians"The Foreign Review 1 (1828), p. 575. The anonymous reviewer criticizes Niebuhr, however, for standardizing Byzantine orthography along Classical lines
^Reinsch, op. cit., reports that
August Heisenberg, professor of Byzantine literature at Munich, once said of Bekker that he "must have revised the texts 'lying on the sofa with the cigar in his mouth.'"
J. B. Bury was even harsher in his assessment, calling the CSHB "the most lamentably feeble production ever given to the world by German scholars of great reputation." See: idem"Introduction", to
Edward Gibbon, The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, vol. 1, ed. Bury (London: Methuen, 1897), p. xlix.