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This book started as a Ph.D. thesis at the History Department of Princeton University and it is my pleasure to express my gratitude to many people who made this study possible. Peter Brown and Neil McLynn introduced me in a seminar to the non‐Chalcedonians and made me aware of the potential that the post‐Chalcedonian period had for scholarly research. Peter Brown in his very cheerful way pushed me to think harder about the religious controversies of the sixth century. He was an outstanding dissertation adviser whose enthusiasm makes all his graduate students feel that their research is leading to the discovery of a new world.
Averil Cameron patiently guided my naive steps through early Byzantine history when I was a visiting graduate student at Oxford, and later kindly agreed to become one of my dissertation examiners. I am grateful that she always took a warm interest in my work. The same holds true for Johannes Hahn from whose support I have profited immensely throughout the last decade: in his first term at Münster he found time to teach me late antique history in a one‐on‐one tutorial, and he read the whole thesis and provided valuable comments when I returned to Münster. He facilitated my work as his Assistent in every way possible and gave me the time to convert the thesis into a book.
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