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Intellectual Routes of the Greeks Volume I 13th to mid-16th
Through the Manuscript and Printed Book
Περιγραφή
Intellectual Routes explores the role of written documents in the transmission of knowledge and education among the Greek-speaking population and the gradual formation of national conscience, from the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 to the years preceding the Greek War of Independence of 1821-1829.
This is the first volume of the series and deals with the teaching of Greek language and literature in Italy, and later on in Northern Europe, and its crucial place in the humanist movement which developed from the mid-14th century. Specific questions include the search and collection of Greek manuscripts by Byzantine and Italian scholars, translations, the debate over the primacy of Plato over Aristotle or vice versa, the establishment of the Greek chair at the University of Padua and the role of the printed book in spreading Classical Greek and Byzantine literature.
Finally, special attention is given to the part played by the Church, that is, the three Patriarchates of the East and the monastic centres (Mount Athos and Meteora), which offered a safe haven to the intellectual world and the role of codex copyists in preserving and passing down the cultural tradition.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
CHAPTER I
From the Capture of Constantinople in 1204
to the Fall of the City in 1453
Political and religious liberties,
economy, migration
Historical and ideological context
Byzantine states
The Empire of Nicaea
The Empire of Trebizond
Intellectual life
The library of the Academy
The Despotate of Epirus
Intellectual centres
The School of Philanthropenon Monastery
The Empire of Thessalonica
Latin kingdoms
The Kingdom of Cyprus
Venetian rule
Characteristics of intellectual life
Mainland Greece
Principality of Achaea
The “Catalan plague”
Venetian territories
Crete
Euboea, Sporades islands and the “Duchy of the Aegean”
Dodecanese
Chios
Lesbos
Ionian islands
Corfu
Cephalonia, Ithaca, Zakynthos
Lefkada
Cythera
Rhodes
The siege and fall of Rhodes (1522)
Greek presence in Southern Italy and Sicily
Cultural influence of the Latins in Greece
Administration and finances in the territories ruled
by the Venetians and the Ottomans
Agricultural and artisanal production
Products
Animal husbandry
Trades
Workforce
Commerce and shipping
Distant commerce
Shipping
Distribution of ethnicities
Colonization
Armenians
Ragusians
Jews
Albanians
Romani
Coins
Notes
CHAPTER II
The transmission of Greek language
and literature in Italy
Greek letters in the West
The teaching of Greek
Education
Palaeologan education
Education and publishing programme
The humanistic school of Guarino Veronese
Humanist philosophy
The translators’ movement in Italy
The Catholic Museum at Constantinople
The discovery of Greek manuscripts during the Renaissance
The contribution of Greek codex copyists to humanist education
Discontinuity in the teaching of Chrysoloras
Council of Ferrara-Florence (1437-1439)
Revival of the dispute between Platonists and Aristotelians in Italy
The intellectual circle of Pope Nicholas V
The Despotate of Moreas
Intellectual activity
Pletho, the school and the book activity surrounding him
Bessarion’s Academy
Religious humanism
Notes
CHAPTER III
Centres of Greek book publishing in Italy
Greek works translated into Latin in the early printing era
Appeals of Greek scholars for a new Crusade
The linguistic and philological question
Grammars as tools for learning Greek
Dictionaries
Reservations towards the printed book in East and West
Origins of Greek printing
The first Greek printer
Two Cretan clergymen and editors
The first printing press owned by Greeks
Greek type
On the printed first edition (Editio princeps)
Greeks at the Universtiy of Padua
The teaching of Thomaeus
Censorship
The Greek university textbook
Dedications and prologues to the editions
Greek letters in Rome
The role of Kalliergis in the circulation of Greek books in Rome
Ideology of the alumni of the Greek college of Rome
The case of Nikolaos Loukanis
Angelos Fortias
Nikolaos Sophianos
The first “theological” book in the vernacular: I. Kartanos
Andronikos Noukios
Antonios Eparchos
Iakovos Trivolis
Dimitrios Zinos
Matthaios Devaris
Epigrams
Revival of earlier literary forms
Notes
CHAPTER IV
The propagation of Greek studies in Northern Europe
Paris: The greatest humanist centre of the North
Laskaris, apostle of Greek spirit in the North
The church of France and ancient literature
Jacques Lefevre d’Etaples: His lectures on Aristotle
The French critical outlook vis-a-vis Greek and
Latin literature
The great chapter of Greek printing in France
The Greek editions of Stephanus (1545-1551)
The position of Angelos Vergikios in the Court of France
The Royal Library of France
Greek letters in Spain
Dimitrios Doukas
From Paris to Geneva. A book centre and bastion of the Reformation
Major printing houses of Geneva: Stephanus and Crespin
The problem of manuscripts
Erasmus’s edition of the New Testament
Greek letters in Germany
Notes
CHAPTER V
The organization of Orthodoxy
in East and West
Organization of the Greeks on the ecclesiastical plane
Relations between the Orthodox and Catholic Churches
Theological tradition in the Orthodox East
The Patriarchal School
The Scholarchs
The Patriarchate: Administration and finances
Athos: A Christian community, refuge of the faithful and ark of the Greek intellectual tradition
Organization of the monasteries
Legal status
Beginnings of regeneration
Spiritual tradition
Theological questions
Codex-copying workshops
Libraries on Mount Athos
The Greek community of Venice
Religious freedom
The Greek Brotherhood
Notes
ABBREVIATIONS – BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEXES
Index of Persons and Subjects
Index of Place Names
This is the first volume of the series and deals with the teaching of Greek language and literature in Italy, and later on in Northern Europe, and its crucial place in the humanist movement which developed from the mid-14th century. Specific questions include the search and collection of Greek manuscripts by Byzantine and Italian scholars, translations, the debate over the primacy of Plato over Aristotle or vice versa, the establishment of the Greek chair at the University of Padua and the role of the printed book in spreading Classical Greek and Byzantine literature.
Finally, special attention is given to the part played by the Church, that is, the three Patriarchates of the East and the monastic centres (Mount Athos and Meteora), which offered a safe haven to the intellectual world and the role of codex copyists in preserving and passing down the cultural tradition.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
CHAPTER I
From the Capture of Constantinople in 1204
to the Fall of the City in 1453
Political and religious liberties,
economy, migration
Historical and ideological context
Byzantine states
The Empire of Nicaea
The Empire of Trebizond
Intellectual life
The library of the Academy
The Despotate of Epirus
Intellectual centres
The School of Philanthropenon Monastery
The Empire of Thessalonica
Latin kingdoms
The Kingdom of Cyprus
Venetian rule
Characteristics of intellectual life
Mainland Greece
Principality of Achaea
The “Catalan plague”
Venetian territories
Crete
Euboea, Sporades islands and the “Duchy of the Aegean”
Dodecanese
Chios
Lesbos
Ionian islands
Corfu
Cephalonia, Ithaca, Zakynthos
Lefkada
Cythera
Rhodes
The siege and fall of Rhodes (1522)
Greek presence in Southern Italy and Sicily
Cultural influence of the Latins in Greece
Administration and finances in the territories ruled
by the Venetians and the Ottomans
Agricultural and artisanal production
Products
Animal husbandry
Trades
Workforce
Commerce and shipping
Distant commerce
Shipping
Distribution of ethnicities
Colonization
Armenians
Ragusians
Jews
Albanians
Romani
Coins
Notes
CHAPTER II
The transmission of Greek language
and literature in Italy
Greek letters in the West
The teaching of Greek
Education
Palaeologan education
Education and publishing programme
The humanistic school of Guarino Veronese
Humanist philosophy
The translators’ movement in Italy
The Catholic Museum at Constantinople
The discovery of Greek manuscripts during the Renaissance
The contribution of Greek codex copyists to humanist education
Discontinuity in the teaching of Chrysoloras
Council of Ferrara-Florence (1437-1439)
Revival of the dispute between Platonists and Aristotelians in Italy
The intellectual circle of Pope Nicholas V
The Despotate of Moreas
Intellectual activity
Pletho, the school and the book activity surrounding him
Bessarion’s Academy
Religious humanism
Notes
CHAPTER III
Centres of Greek book publishing in Italy
Greek works translated into Latin in the early printing era
Appeals of Greek scholars for a new Crusade
The linguistic and philological question
Grammars as tools for learning Greek
Dictionaries
Reservations towards the printed book in East and West
Origins of Greek printing
The first Greek printer
Two Cretan clergymen and editors
The first printing press owned by Greeks
Greek type
On the printed first edition (Editio princeps)
Greeks at the Universtiy of Padua
The teaching of Thomaeus
Censorship
The Greek university textbook
Dedications and prologues to the editions
Greek letters in Rome
The role of Kalliergis in the circulation of Greek books in Rome
Ideology of the alumni of the Greek college of Rome
The case of Nikolaos Loukanis
Angelos Fortias
Nikolaos Sophianos
The first “theological” book in the vernacular: I. Kartanos
Andronikos Noukios
Antonios Eparchos
Iakovos Trivolis
Dimitrios Zinos
Matthaios Devaris
Epigrams
Revival of earlier literary forms
Notes
CHAPTER IV
The propagation of Greek studies in Northern Europe
Paris: The greatest humanist centre of the North
Laskaris, apostle of Greek spirit in the North
The church of France and ancient literature
Jacques Lefevre d’Etaples: His lectures on Aristotle
The French critical outlook vis-a-vis Greek and
Latin literature
The great chapter of Greek printing in France
The Greek editions of Stephanus (1545-1551)
The position of Angelos Vergikios in the Court of France
The Royal Library of France
Greek letters in Spain
Dimitrios Doukas
From Paris to Geneva. A book centre and bastion of the Reformation
Major printing houses of Geneva: Stephanus and Crespin
The problem of manuscripts
Erasmus’s edition of the New Testament
Greek letters in Germany
Notes
CHAPTER V
The organization of Orthodoxy
in East and West
Organization of the Greeks on the ecclesiastical plane
Relations between the Orthodox and Catholic Churches
Theological tradition in the Orthodox East
The Patriarchal School
The Scholarchs
The Patriarchate: Administration and finances
Athos: A Christian community, refuge of the faithful and ark of the Greek intellectual tradition
Organization of the monasteries
Legal status
Beginnings of regeneration
Spiritual tradition
Theological questions
Codex-copying workshops
Libraries on Mount Athos
The Greek community of Venice
Religious freedom
The Greek Brotherhood
Notes
ABBREVIATIONS – BIBLIOGRAPHY
INDEXES
Index of Persons and Subjects
Index of Place Names
Κριτικές
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