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| I would like to add to this subject one more source from Dr Noel. Archimedes Palimpsest "Paleography, or the study of ancient texts, can allow us to approximately date when manuscripts were written. The Archimedes manuscript was probably written in the second half of the tenth century. It was almost certainly written at Constantinople, for the simple reason that there is no other place that we know of where ancient mathematics was systematically studied and copied. Constantinople was the one place with a continued tradition of copying and preserving ancient texts from antiquity through the Middle Ages. Specifically, the study of Archimedes texts can be associated with the work of Leo the Geometer. Leo the Geometer was the cousin of John VII Morocharzianus, who was Patriarch in Constantinople between 837 and 843. In the 820¢s, Leo was giving private instruction in Constantinople. Evidently he was successful at inspiring his students: one of them, who had read Euclid under his supervision, was captured by the Arabs in 830. His report of Leo¢s learning was sufficient to cause the Caliph to invite Leo to Baghdad. He did not go. Instead he took up the charge of the Byzantine Emperor Theophilus (829-842) to educate the public in the church of the Forty Martyrs in Constantinople. Leo was clearly something of a polymath, and a practical one at that. While in Theophilus¢s service, he built fire stations between the City and the border of the Empire. Should there be an emergency on the border north of Tarsus, a message could reach the Capital in less than an hour. In the Late 850¢s the assistant Emperor, Bardas, founded a school in the Imperial Palace, under Leo¢s direction. Other professors were appointed too: Cometas, a literary scholar, Theodegius, an astronomer, and, perhaps most significantly for us Theodore, a geometer. We know few of the details of Leo¢s school, but we can assume that it was a center of learning. Two surviving manuscripts containing texts by Archimedes contain inscriptions praising Leo the Geometer. It seems highly likely that it was as a result of his work that manuscripts of Archimedes were copied in this period. The ninth and tenth centuries were glorious centuries for the Byzantine Empire. Constantinople was immensely wealthy, and physically secure. The imperial palace was a center of culture, and its monasteries flourished. This is the climate in which it is easiest to see the Archimedes manuscript being copied. However, the long period of prosperity ended abruptly in 1204. In this year, the Fourth Crusade, sanctioned by Pope Innocent III, set out for the Holy Land. However, they stopped short of their goal, and sacked Constantinople. Constantinople was the richest City in Europe, and for over 700 years it had been a safe haven for ancient text But the years after the sack of Constantinople were not years in which there was a great need for the advanced mathematical treatises of Archimedes, or the Ancient speeches of Hyperides. It was probably in the aftermath of this event that these texts were palimpsested. In 2002, Professor John Lowden of the Courtauld Institute, using Ultra-violet light, managed to decipher a colophon, on the bottom of folio 1 verso of the manuscript, which contains the date of April 13, 1229." Perhaps the Byzantine empire's greatest contribution to literature was their careful preservation of Ancient Helenic literature, which was thereby transmitted both to Europe and to the Islamic world, as well as compilations of works on certain subjects, with certain revisions, most notably in the fields of medicine and history.The fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans in 1453 was a turning point. Where Byzantine -Helens scholars fled west to Rome and Venice(the Hellenic community in Venice was established this period), bringing with them classical Roman and Hellenic texts as well as their knowledge of the classical civilizations, much of which had been lost in Western Europe for centuries.The main reason that Latins couldn't read Hellenic was the estrangement of Eastern and Western Christendom.By the year 450 there were very few in western Europe who could read Hellenic, and after 600, although Byzantium still called itself the Roman Empire, it was rare for a Byzantine to speak Latin, the language of the Romans.This estrangement was conditioned by cultural, political, and economic factors; yet its fundamental cause was not secular but theological. Here is the 500th annivarsy of Hellenic community in Venice . Events to honor 500th anniversary of Greek community in Venice conclude |
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| It is known in Europe that the Europeans had a problem with the 0 concept until the 1400-1500 ACE. Intro: By 130, Ptolemy, influenced by Hipparchus and the Babylonians, was using a symbol for zero (a small circle with a long overbar) within a sexagesimal numeral system otherwise using alphabetic Greek numerals. Because it was used alone, not just as a placeholder, this Hellenistic zero was perhaps the first documented use of a number zero in the Old World. The first work printed in 1488 that aimed to explain the concept 0 was from Johannes Sacrobosco claimed to have been originally written in the 13th Century. In any case here is an excerpt from Fibonacci: Fibonacci: Quote:
And Ptolemy used the letter Omicron with an overbar on top to denote zero in the early Ellinistic Era.
__________________ NIPSON ANOMIMATA MIMON AN OPSIN =========================== www.noemon.blogspot.com Elafonisos/Lakonia -This god {Helios} has civilized, by the agency of the Hellenic colonies, the greatest part of the habitable globe; he has prepared it the more readily to submit to the Romans... -Julian's Salutation to the Sun, Roman Emperor (331–June 26, 363 ACE) |
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| "At least three quarters of the ancient Greek classics that survived did so through Byzantine manuscripts." -Michael H. Harris, History of Libraries in the Western World, Scarecrow Press Incorporated, 1995, ISBN 0810837242 "Much of what we know about antiquity – especially Hellenic and Roman literature and Roman law - would have been lost forever, if it weren’t for the scholars and the scribes of Constantinople." -J.J. Norwich, A Short History of Byzantium, 1997, Vintage Books, ISBN 0679772693
__________________ Φωτιά και τσεκούρι στους προσκυνημένους -Θεόδωρος Κολοκοτρώνης |
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| Yes indeed it is a fact what Tsontos says, because the Renaissance started to flourish very slowly after 1204. when the Crusaders stole thousands of manuscripts and artwork from Konstantinoupoli, and Arabs also, but they actually were reborn after 1453 and earlier, when many scholars immigrated to the West with their knowledge and spirituality, which not only was enriched with the Eastern history and culture but had also developed much more than West anyway. Something which of course -except from some cases only- was never acknowledge fully and openly by the arrogant West.
__________________ Η ισχύς εν τη ενώση- Έλληνες Ενωμένοι. Σμηναγός Κ.Ηλιάκης - Αντιπλοίαρχος Χ.Καραθανάσης Αντιπλοίαρχος Π.Βλαχάκος - Σημαιοφόρος Ε.Γιαλοψός Υποσμηναγός Ν. Σιαλμάς. Αθάνατοι! |