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Mystras / Ministry of Culture of Greece, Archaeological Receipts Fund (TAP) ; director/producer, Dimitris Arvanitis ; text, Nikos Zias.
Format
Video/Projected medium
Language
English
Published/Created
Athens, Greece : TAP Service, ©1988.
Description
1 videocassette (34:20 min.) : sound, color ; 1/2 in.
Availability
Copies in the Library
Location
Call Number
Status
Location Service
Notes
ReCAP - Remote Storage: Video Collection
VCASS
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Details
Subject(s)
Mural painting and decoration
—
Greece
—
Mistra
[Browse]
Mural painting and decoration, Byzantine
—
Greece
—
Mistra
[Browse]
Church buildings
—
Greece
—
Mistra
[Browse]
Church arcitecture
—
Greece
—
Mistra
[Browse]
Art, Byzantine
—
Greece
—
Mistra
[Browse]
Architecture, Byzantine
—
Greece
—
Mistra
[Browse]
Architecture, Medieval
—
Greece
—
Mistra
[Browse]
Mistra (Greece)
[Browse]
Mistra (Greece)
—
History
[Browse]
Mistra (Greece)
—
Buildings, structures, etc
[Browse]
Related name
Greece. Hypourgeio Politismou
[Browse]
Greece. Tameio Archaiologikōn Porōn kai Apallotriōseōn
[Browse]
Arvanitis, Dimitris
[Browse]
Zias, Nikos
[Browse]
Demopoulos, Christos
[Browse]
Series
Video-archive of Byzantine culture.
[More in this series]
The Video-archive of Byzantine culture
Summary note
Mystras, the Byzantine castle-city, was built on a foothill of Mt. Taygetus and flourished during the last two centuries of the Byzantine Empire (13th-15th A.D.). Here art and natural beauty meet and history casts its spell over the ruined castles, magnificent palaces and noble mansions, while on the frescoed walls of the seven churches the finest pictorial expression of Paleologan art unfolds and mingles with the art of East and West.
Notes
Title transliterated from the Greek.
Credits in Greek.
Series statement on container: Video-archive of the Byzantine civilization.
Creation/Production credits
Director of photography, Takis Mpardakos ; music, Giorgos Kouroupos ; archaeological consultant, Nikos Zias.
Target audience
General.
System details
VHS.
NTSC.
Participant(s)/Performer(s)
Narrator, Christos Demopoulos.
Source acquisition
Gift of the Program in Hellenic Studies with the support of the Stanley J. Seeger Hellenic Fund.
OCLC
436088338
Statement on language in description
Princeton University Library aims to describe library materials in a manner that is respectful to the individuals and communities who create, use, and are represented in the collections we manage.
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