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David Barchard is too modest:  can you report on what he himself has
published?

One more (semi-popular) title which may be worth a mention is:
John Ash, *A Byzantine Journey*, London: I.B.Tauris, 1995.
This is a travelogue (Istambul to Cappadocia via Bursa and Konya) informed
by Byzantine and Seljuk history.  The author is originally from Manchester
but now lives in America.  Its a very well produced and elegantly written
text, with a lively sense of how, until very recently, so much of Anatolia
was infused by Greek culture.

Ian Tompkins
University of Wales
Aberystwyth

At 19:08 02/11/98 GMT, you wrote:
>I forwarded the recent discussion on Cappadocia to my parishioner David
>Barchard, who has published extensively on the subject.  I now forward his
>reply to the list.
>>Spero Kostof :          Caves of God (Oxford University Press and Berkeley)
>>(semi-popular account)
>>Lyn Rodley:             Cave Monasteries of Byzantine Cappadocia (CUP)
>>Nicole Thierry          Les Nouvelles Eglises Rupestre de Cappadoce 
>>Catherine Jolivet Levy  ‘Les Eglise Byzantines de Cappadoce'
>>Friedrich Hild and Marcel Restle: Tabula Imperii Byzantini Vol 2
>>‘Kappadokien' (Vienna Academy of Sciences)




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