Zavagno, Luca2022-03-172022-03-172021-10-07978-3-030-84306-9http://hdl.handle.net/11693/77772This chapter will navigate through the many incarnations of Byzantine urbanism in three different geographical areas of the empire: Anatolia and Aegean (the two constitutive pillars of the Byzantine heartland) and the so-called insular/coastal koine. Each of these played a changing and diverse role in the political, administrative, fiscal, and military strategies of the empire, as well as betraying peculiar economies of scale. It will examine by proposing a brief historical and archaeological overview of a selection of urban centers in different geographical contexts. This should help the reader see through the various functional trajectories of the Byzantine city (sometimes contemporary, sometimes diachronic) from a comparative perspective. It allows to extrapolate the reality of Byzantine urbanism from the historiographical and terminological debate as presented by the literary sources.EnglishByzantine heartlandIslandsCoastlandKoineUrbanism in the Byzantine heartland and the coastal/ insular koineBook Chapter10.1007/978-3-030-84307-6_3978-3-030-84307-6