Cyril Mango | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1928-04-14)14 April 1928 Istanbul, Turkey |
| Died | 8 February 2021(2021-02-08) (aged 92) United Kingdom |
| Academic background | |
| Education | |
| Alma mater |
|
| Thesis | Recherches sur le palais impérial de Constantinople : la Chalcé et ses abords (1953) |
| Doctoral advisor | Rodolphe Guilland |
| Academic work | |
| Institutions |
|
| Doctoral students | John Wortley |
| Notable works | Byzantium: The Empire of New Rome |
Cyril Alexander MangoFBA, FSA (14 April 1928 – 8 February 2021) was a Britishscholar of thehistory,art, andarchitecture of theByzantine Empire. He is celebrated as one of the leadingByzantinists of the 20th century.[1][2]
Mango wasKoraes Professor of Modern Greek and Byzantine History, Language and Literature atKing's College London,[3] theUniversity of Oxford Bywater and Sotheby Professor Emeritus of Byzantine and Modern Greek Language and Literature and emeritus professorial fellow ofExeter College, Oxford.[4]
Mango was born on 14 April 1928 inIstanbul, Turkey, the youngest of three sons of Alexander A. Mango, a descendant of a Genoese family who came to Istanbul viaChios, and Adelaide, known as Ada, (née Damonov) Mango, a refugee fromBaku.[5] One of his brothers,Andrew Mango, who lived and worked in London becoming head of the South East European Service of the BBC World Service, was also a respected scholar and author on Turkey.[6] His other brother, Anthony, moved to America and became a senior figure in theUnited Nations.[5] They were raised in a multi-lingual household where the common language was French but the children also spoke Russian, Greek, English and Turkish. Cyril Mango was also fluent in Spanish and Italian.[2]
After being schooled at theEnglish High School for Boys in Istanbul,[7] where his father, who became a British citizen after studying law in England, was a barrister and legal counsel to the British ambassador,[8] he graduated from theUniversity of St Andrews with an M.A. inclassical philology in 1949. He went on to study at theUniversity of Paris, leaving theSorbonne with a doctorate in history in 1953.[3][9]
Cyril Mango’s archaeological and academic work (excavation, publications, edited volumes, translations, lectures) on Byzantine culture was extensive.[14] His first major book,The Brazen House. A Study of the Vestibule of the Imperial Palace of Constantinople was published in 1959 and remains a classic. One of his other major works,The Mosaics of St. Sophia at Istanbul (1962), details the history of the mosaics of theHagia Sophia and is still considered an important work. He also editedThe Oxford History of Byzantium (2002) often recommended as the best introduction to the subject. At the time of his death, he was overseeing the final details of a major book on Constantinople ahead of its publication.[15]
As a sign of respect, the flag atExeter College, Oxford was flown at half-mast in the week of Professor Mango’s death.[4]
Cyril Mango donated his extensive private library to theGennadius Library who held a symposium in honour of his 80th birthday in 2008 entitled “Byzantine Athens: Monuments, Excavations, Inscriptions”[3] and, photographs, attributed to him, are held in theConway Library whose archive of primarily architectural images is being digitised as part of the wider Courtauld Connects project.[16]
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 marriedMarlia Mundell in 1976. He had two daughters, one from his marriage to Mabel and one from his marriage to Susan.[11]