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- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance abstract "The migration waves of Byzantine scholars and émigrés in the period following the Crusader sacking of Constantinople and the end of the Byzantine Roman Empire in 1453, is considered by many scholars key to the revival of Greek and Roman studies that led to the development of the Renaissance humanism and science. These emigres were grammarians, humanists, poets, writers, printers, lecturers, musicians, astronomers, architects, academics, artists, scribes, philosophers, scientists, politicians and theologians. They brought to Western Europe the far greater preserved and accumulated knowledge of their own (Greek) civilization.Their main role within the Renaissance humanism was the teaching of the Greek language to their western counterparts in universities or privately together with the spread of ancient texts. Their forerunners were Barlaam of Calabria (Bernardo Massari) and Leonzio Pilato, both drawn from culturally Byzantine southern Italy. The impact of these two scholars on the very first Renaissance humanists was indisputable.Collegio Pontifico Greco was a foundation of Gregory XIII, who established a college in Rome to receive young Greeks belonging to any nation in which the Greek Rite was used, and consequently for Greek refugees in Italy as well as the Ruthenians and Malchites of Egypt and Syria. These young men had to study the sacred sciences, in order to spread later sacred and profane learning among their fellow-countrymen and facilitate the reunion of the schismatical churches. The construction of the College and Church of S. Atanasio, joined by a bridge over the Via dei Greci, was begun at once. The same year (1577) the first students arrived, and until the completion of the college were housed elsewhere.Besides the southern Italians who inhabited ex-Byzantine territories of the peninsula and Sicily which were still closely connected with the Byzantine culture (and still Greek speaking in many areas), by 1500 there was a Greek speaking community of about 5,000 in Venice. The Venetians also ruled Crete, Dalmatia, and scattered islands and port cities of the former empire the populations of which were augmented by refugees from other Byzantine provinces who preferred Venetian to Ottoman governance. Crete was especially notable for the Cretan School of icon-painting, which after 1453 became the most important in the Greek world.".
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance thumbnail Demetrius_Chalcondyles.JPG?width=300.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance wikiPageExternalLink hum-reeve-greek.htm.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance wikiPageExternalLink Botley.pdf.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance wikiPageExternalLink gennadius_wordfathers.asp.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance wikiPageExternalLink 1-66.pdf.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance wikiPageExternalLink www.istitutoellenico.org.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance wikiPageExternalLink krumbacher.pdf.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance wikiPageExternalLink harris-ren.html.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance wikiPageExternalLink cmh116.html.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance wikiPageExternalLink san-giorgio-dei-greci.htm.
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- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance subject Category:Byzantine_science.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance subject Category:Greece–Italy_relations.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance subject Category:Greek_Renaissance_humanists.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance subject Category:Renaissance.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance subject Category:Renaissance_humanism.
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance subject Category:Scholars.
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- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance type Scholar110557854.
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- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance comment "The migration waves of Byzantine scholars and émigrés in the period following the Crusader sacking of Constantinople and the end of the Byzantine Roman Empire in 1453, is considered by many scholars key to the revival of Greek and Roman studies that led to the development of the Renaissance humanism and science.".
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance label "Eruditi bizantini nel Rinascimento".
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance label "Greek scholars in the Renaissance".
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance label "Греческие учёные Возрождения".
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance label "الباحثون اليونان في عصر النهضة".
- Greek_scholars_in_the_Renaissance sameAs Eruditi_bizantini_nel_Rinascimento.
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