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Cristoforo Kondoleon: Scritti omerici

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta ; 271 | Bibliothèque de Byzantion ; 17Publisher: Leuven; Paris; Bristol: Peeters, 2018Description: xxxvi, 151 p., ill.; 26 cmISBN:
  • 9789042934290
ISSN:
  • 0777-978X
Subject(s): Summary: "What moral or allegorical lessons can Homer's epics teach? Six essays by Christophoros Kondoleon, a 16th-century Greek scholar working in Rome during the last phase of Italian humanism, illustrate the moral qualities (esp. the autourgia) of the heroes, provide close readings of the two proems and of the description of Agamemnon's panoply in Iliad 11, answer a collection of miscellaneous, mostly philosophical "Homeric questions", and gather passages "on the good general (and soldier) according to Homer". While sometimes overtly indebted to the approaches of earlier Homerists (from Aristotle to ancient scholia, from Porphyry to Eustathios of Thessalonike, etc.), Kondoleon's treatises are unique both as original products in their own right, and as the only truly exegetical writings on Homer in Greek humanism. The present book provides the first critical edition (in two cases, the editio princeps) of these texts, with facing Italian translation and an introductory essay sketching their main features, their cultural significance, and some of their sources."
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Item type Current library Call number Status Date due Barcode
Continuing Resources Continuing Resources Netherlands-Flemish Institute in Cairo (NVIC) Library First Floor - 1.06 M 227 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available M 227

Includes bibliographical references and index.

"What moral or allegorical lessons can Homer's epics teach? Six essays by Christophoros Kondoleon, a 16th-century Greek scholar working in Rome during the last phase of Italian humanism, illustrate the moral qualities (esp. the autourgia) of the heroes, provide close readings of the two proems and of the description of Agamemnon's panoply in Iliad 11, answer a collection of miscellaneous, mostly philosophical "Homeric questions", and gather passages "on the good general (and soldier) according to Homer". While sometimes overtly indebted to the approaches of earlier Homerists (from Aristotle to ancient scholia, from Porphyry to Eustathios of Thessalonike, etc.), Kondoleon's treatises are unique both as original products in their own right, and as the only truly exegetical writings on Homer in Greek humanism. The present book provides the first critical edition (in two cases, the editio princeps) of these texts, with facing Italian translation and an introductory essay sketching their main features, their cultural significance, and some of their sources."

Text in Greek with Italian translation on facing pages; introductory matter in Italian.

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