Abstract

Abstract This article will investigate the extent to which the contacts made by Byzantine envoys to western Europe from 1394 onwards were later used by them and by their families to secure a safe haven following the fall of Constantinople in 1453. It will examine first the case of Italy and some examples which have been addressed by previous scholarship, as well as one less well documented case. It will then consider whether the same link between envoys and refugees can be discerned in other western countries, taking England as a case-study. Byzantine envoys were active there from 1398 and there is also plenty of evidence for the presence of refugees from 1455. The envoys apparently enjoyed very cordial relations with the English court which in turn led to a romanticised view of England in Byzantine literary circles as a place of safety. An attempt will then be made to identify individuals at the English court who might have had contact with the envoys, focusing on the Neville family. Two members of this family were in positions of influence at the time when the Byzantine delegations were in the country, while another was later the patron of a number of refugees. The article will then assess whether the earlier contact with the family could have been a factor in motivating refugees to travel to England, as well as considering other explanations.

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