Abstract
With the present investigation, based upon the codex no 2347 (National Library of Greece) including an unpublished patriarchal document, we have the special opportunity to contribute to a further and more detailed examination concerning the reformation of the Gregorian calendar. We also try to study the development of the activity of Jesuits to consolidate this innovation in the area of Russia Minor (Ruthenians) and to provide a useful insight into the relations between the two major churches and doctrines, Orthodox and Roman Catholic. We approach, through their representatives, the historical conditions to the lands dominated by the Ottomans and the Venetians during the second half and especially the two last decades of the 16th century and generally the factors that progressively shaped the attitudes, the argumentation and the ideological views which enable us to understand from that angle the true origins of the conflict relevant to the introduction of the new calendar.
© 2014 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin/Boston
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Siglenverzeichnis
- I. ABTEILUNG
- Areopagitic influence and neoplatonic (Plotinian) echoes in Photius’ Amphilochia: question 180
- “You possess me, you bring me with you, I am a part of you”: a new Byzantine riddle in the Pal. Gr. 116
- The account of Thoulis, king of Egypt, in the Chronographia of John Malalas
- Psellos in 1078
- Racing with rhetoric: a Byzantine ekphrasis of a chariot race
- Hypatios of Ephesos and Ps.-Dionysios Areopagites
- Kaiser Phokas (602–610) als Erinnerungsproblem
- Roman identity in Byzantium: a critical approach
- Un sigillion inédit du patriarche de Constantinople Jérémie II et d’Alexandre Sylvestre sur la réforme du calendrier
- II. ABTEILUNG
- III. ABTEILUNG. Bibliographische Notizen und Mitteilungen
Articles in the same Issue
- Masthead
- Siglenverzeichnis
- I. ABTEILUNG
- Areopagitic influence and neoplatonic (Plotinian) echoes in Photius’ Amphilochia: question 180
- “You possess me, you bring me with you, I am a part of you”: a new Byzantine riddle in the Pal. Gr. 116
- The account of Thoulis, king of Egypt, in the Chronographia of John Malalas
- Psellos in 1078
- Racing with rhetoric: a Byzantine ekphrasis of a chariot race
- Hypatios of Ephesos and Ps.-Dionysios Areopagites
- Kaiser Phokas (602–610) als Erinnerungsproblem
- Roman identity in Byzantium: a critical approach
- Un sigillion inédit du patriarche de Constantinople Jérémie II et d’Alexandre Sylvestre sur la réforme du calendrier
- II. ABTEILUNG
- III. ABTEILUNG. Bibliographische Notizen und Mitteilungen