1. Emperor Leo VI, also called “the Wise,” who issued the regulations known as The Book of the Eparch (or The Book of the Prefect) by DESTINI TIMBERLAKE.
2. The Book of the Eparch (also called The Book of the Prefect), a set of regulations of the markets, guilds, industries, and commerce of Constantinople in the early 10th century by GEORGE PEPIA.
To remind you, to research your presentations (maximum length 10 minutes), consult the reference works here on Blackboard (Destini and George, you will both start with the Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium), your course books, wikipedia, and also CSI Library, with databases online of academic journals and ebooks, to make up your bibliography on your topic – minimum number of references is five (but try to find as many good refs as you can), and you must format your bibliography following the Chicago Manual of Style Humanities format. For models for formatting your bibliography consult Rampolla, Pocket Guide to Writing in History, in the section “Documentation Models,” examples of those for bibliographies (on blackboard the 3rd edition copy of Rampolla).
Oral Presentations topic : Emperor Constantine VII Porphyrogenitus, author/patron of the Book of Ceremonies and other
scholarly works.