This volume, edited by Natasha Constantinidou and Han Lamers, investigates modes of receiving and responding to Greeks, Greece, and Greek in early modern Europe (15th-17th centuries). The book's seventeen detailed studies illuminate the reception of Greek culture (the classical, Byzantine, and even post-Byzantine traditions), the Greek language (ancient, vernacular, and 'humanist'), as well as the people claiming, or being assigned, Greek identities during this period in different geographical and cultural contexts.
Discussing subjects as diverse as, for example, Greek studies and the Reformation, artistic interchange between Greek East and Latin West, networks of communication in the Greek diaspora, and the ramifications of Greek antiquarianism, the book aims at encouraging a more concerted debate about the role of Hellenism in early modern Europe that goes beyond disciplinary boundaries, and opening ways towards a more over-arching understanding of this multifaceted cultural phenomenon.
Contributors: Aslıhan AkıÅık-Karakullukçu, Michele Bacci, Malika Bastin-Hammou, Peter Bell, Michail Chatzidakis, Federica Ciccolella, Calliope Dourou, Anthony Ellis, Niccolò Fattori, Maria Luisa Napolitano, Janika Päll, Luigi-Alberto Sanchi, Niketas Siniossoglou, William Stenhouse, Paola Tomè, Raf Van Rooy, and Stefan Weise.
Natasha Constantinidou, Ph.D. (Edinburgh) is Assistant Professor in European History (University of Cyprus). She has published on book and intellectual history, including Responses to Religious Division, c. 1580â1620 (2017) and a number of articles on sixteenth-century Greek printing.
Han Lamers (Ph.D. Leiden University, 2013) is Associate Professor at the Department of Philosophy, Classics, and the History of Art and Ideas of the University of Oslo (Norway). His publications include Greece Reinvented: Transformations of Byzantine Hellenism in Renaissance Italy (2015).
âReceptions of Hellenism in Early Modern Europe: 15thâ17th Centuries is an engaging and wide-ranging volume for both historians and classicists, detailing with a diverse range of Greek receptions in this important period.â - Harriet Lander, University of Nottingham, in: Journal of British Studies, Vol. 60, No. 1 (January 2021), pp. 181â183
Preface
List of Figures and Tables
List of Abbreviations
Contributors
Introduction: Receptions of Hellenism in Early Modern Europe
âNatasha Constantinidou and Han Lamers
Part 1: Access and Dissemination
Part 2: Learning, Teaching, and Printing Greek
1 Aldus Manutius and the Learning of Greek: the Aldine Appendix
âPaola Tomè (â )
2 From a Thirsty Desert to the Rise of the Collège de France: Greek Studies in Paris, c.1490â1540
âLuigi-Alberto Sanchi
3 Teaching Greek with Aristophanes in the French Renaissance, 1528â1549
âMalika Bastin-Hammou
4 A Professor at Work: Hadrianus Amerotius (1490â1560) and the Study of Greek in Sixteenth-Century Louvain
âRaf Van Rooy
5 Greek History in the Early-Modern Classroom: Lectures on Herodotus by Johannes Rosa and School Notes by Jacques Bongars (Jena, 1568)
âAnthony Ellis
Part 3: Migration, Exchange, and Identity
Cultural Encounters and Exchanges between âGreek Eastâ and âLatin Westâ
6 From âBounteous Flux of Matterâ to Hellenic City: Late Byzantine Representations of Constantinople and the Western Audience
âAslihan AkiÅik-Karakullukçu
8 Barbaric and Assimilated Hellenes: Textual and Visual Images of Greek Scholars between Lapo da Castiglionchio (c.1405â1438) and Paolo Giovio (1483â1552)
âPeter Bell
9 Maximos Margounios (c.1549â1602), his Anacreontic Hymns, and the Byzantine Revival in Early Modern Germany
âFederica Ciccolella
Perspectives on Greek Migrants in the West
10 Love and Exile in Michael Marullus Tarchaniota: Geographical Exile, Spiritual Homelessness
âNiketas Siniossogliou
11 The Longs and Shorts of an Emergent Nation: Nikolaos Loukanesâs 1526 Iliad and the Unprosodic New Trojans
âCalliope Dourou
12 From Courts to Cities: Greek Migration, Community Formation, and Networks of Mutual Assistance in Sixteenth-Century Italy
âNiccolò Fattori
Appropriations and Use: Cultural & Religious
History, Archaeology, and Antiquarianism
13 The Greekness of Greek Inscriptions: Ancient Inscriptions in Early Modern Scholarship
âWilliam Stenhouse
14 Pirro Ligorio (1513â1583) and Greek Antiquity
âMichail Chatzidakis
15 Ancient Coins and the Use of Greek History in Sicilia et Magna Graecia by Hubertus Goltzius (1525â1583)
âMaria Luisa Napolitano
Humanist Greek and the Reformation
16 Hyperborean Flowers: Humanist Greek Around the Baltic Sea, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries
âJanika Päll
17 âGraecia transvolavit Alpesâ: the Evaluation of Humanist Greek Writing in Germany by Georg Lizel (1694â1761)
âStefan Weise