This book examines the many ways Byzantines lived with their trees. It
takes seriously theological and hagiographic tree engagement as
expressions of that culture's deep involvement--and even
fascination--with the arboreal. These pages tap into the current
attention paid to plants in a wide range of scholarship, an attention
that involves the philosophy of plant life as well as scientific
discoveries of how communicative trees may be, and how they defend
themselves. Considering writings on and images of trees from Late
Antiquity and medieval Byzantium sympathetically, the book argues for an
arboreal imagination at the root of human aspirations to know and draw
close to the divine.