The Book of the Prefect or Eparch (from the Greek: Τὸ ἐπαρχικὸν βιβλίον or To eparchikon biblion) is a Byzantine commercial manual or guide promulgated by Leo VI in 911 or 912. Based on established customs and laws and now littered with later interpolations, the Book is an essential document in the economic history of Byzantium and the Mediterranean. It was named Livre de l'Éparque by its Swiss discoverer Jules Nicole in 1891.
The Book is essentially a list of regulations concerning the collegia or private guilds that had existed in the Greek world since Roman times. The "prefect" or "eparch" of the title was the highest economic official in Constantinople and had charge of, for example, tariffs and import/export regulation, which the Book covers. Every trade was theoretically under government control, though the Book of the Prefect is not exhaustive of all crafts: it deals with precisely nineteen guilds in its twenty-two chapters. The chief reason for such imperial (and imperious) concern over commerce was for the efficient raising of a maximum of revenue through taxation.
The Book has been translated into English twice.[1] Earlier, in 1893, a trilingual edition—in the original Greek, Latin, and French—was made by Jules Nicole, who discovered the only surviving manuscript in a Genevan library.[2] New English translations of sections vi.31–33 and xx.56–57 have since been made by Lopez and Raymond (1951) using Nicole's Greek, but the translators call for completely updated English editions using the most recent Byzantine scholarship.[3] In 1970 Variorum Reprints gathered Nicole's editions and Freshfield's English translation along with a photographic reproduction of the mansucript (Genevensis 23) appended to a new introduction by I. Dujčev. This collection was typically used by scholars until a translation was made into German with a new critical edition of the Greek.[4]
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