1. Introduction
2. Middle Byzantium's Environmental and Economic Antecedents2.1 Taxes
and Rents, Olives and Vines, Slaves and Cattle2.2 A Transformed Economy,
Culture, and Environment2.3 An Elite-less Landscape?2.4 A New
Equilibrium?
3. An Evergreen Empire3.1 Woodland Species Around the Aegean3.2 The
Expansion of Woodland in the Aegean Littoral3.3 Contexts for Woodland
Species' Success3.4 Using Woodland
4. The Decline of the Olive in Middle Byzantium4.1 What the Olive Tree
Does and How People Work with it4.2 The Olive in the Ancient and Modern
Contexts4.3 The Olive in Retreat4.4 Where did the Olives go?4.5 New Uses
for an Old Object
5. Re-arranging Woods and Scrub5.1 Complicating the Landscape 5.2
Contexts for Altering the Landscape5.3 Deciduous Oak's Fortunes5.4
Chestnut's Fortunes5.5 Room to Maneuver
6. The Return of the Olive6.1 Where and When the Olive Returns 6.2
Monastic Assistance6.3 From Peasants to Merchants6.4 Olives from the
Scrub
7. The Devil Chops Wood7.1 Social Causes and Outcomes of a Contested
Countryside7.2 Hagiography and Conflict in the Landscape7.3
Hagiographical Strategies for a Contested Landscape
8. Conclusion