If a man is unversed in Latin & Greek, he is, in the strict sense of the term (do look it up), an ILLITERATE. I say that not in any spirit of moral judgment, but as a matter of accurate classification.
He may be clever, or even wise, but he remains an uneducated barbarian.
Please check out the Aristotle Reader Project v. 0.5 johnhboyer-sys.github.io/nicomachean-et…
Going to expand corpus offerings. Suggestions and bug reports in replies please!
If you like it, please RT!
@BBHerodotus pretty sure most universities have the Harvard Classics and the Bible. along with thousands of other resources. you could literally learn the languages the Harvard Classics translate from. ill take the 10 years please
I’m of the opinion that a young man could lock himself away in a tower for a year with the five foot shelf of Harvard Classics and a good Bible, and would re-emerge a better man than had he spent a decade in a modern university.
Tourism doesn’t lift countries out of poverty. It never has.
All it does is keep them trapped in a loop of mediocrity, low-value activities and chronic inability to produce anything of value. It also reduces housing availability, making it more expensive for native populations.
Romans=\ Greek/Hellenes
This is a basic claim in Byzantine identity studies.
Many medieval Romans were Greek-speaking, yes.
But their primary self-designation was Romaioi, Romans.
Greek-speaking Roman does not automatically mean “Greek” as an ethnic identity.
Roman identity in Byzantium was imperial, political, religious, cultural, and legal.
It cannot simply be collapsed into one ethnic label.
Reference List
Kaldellis, A. (2007) Hellenism in Byzantium: The Transformations of Greek Identity and the Reception of the Classical Tradition. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Kaplanis, T.A. (2014) ‘Antique Names and Self-Identification: Hellenes, Graikoi, and Romaioi from Late Byzantium to the Greek Nation-State’, in Tziovas, D. (ed.) Re-imagining the Past: Antiquity and Modern Greek Culture. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 80–97. doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199672752.003.0005.
Stouraitis, I. (2014) ‘Roman identity in Byzantium: a critical approach’, Byzantinische Zeitschrift, 107(1), pp. 175–220. doi:10.1515/bz-2014-0009.
Theodoropoulos, P. (2021) ‘Did the Byzantines call themselves Byzantines? Elements of Eastern Roman identity in the imperial discourse of the seventh century’, Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, 45(1), pp. 1–13. doi:10.1017/byz.2020.25.
@trottskyathome any "best author" list with shakespeare at the top was made by someone who knows only english and who didn't read much after highschool drama club
🚨SHOCKING CONTRAST: One Hagia Sophia a Church, the other desecrated by Turkish barbarity🚨
This is the Hagia Sophia in Thessaloniki, built just over a hundred years after the one in Constantinople.
It stands today exactly as it was meant to be, a glorious Christian Church, yet in Constantinople, Turkish barbarity forcibly converted the original Hagia Sophia into a mosque, stripping its true glory as a church but whatever they do, they will never manage to erase its identity.
Wherever the Turkish path went, it left behind nothing but destruction, misery, and suffering.
The international community has stayed silent on Turkey’s atrocities for decades.
The question remains: WHY?
Christian heritage deserves to be protected, not erased.