• Theodosius of Alexandria was an Ancient Greek grammarian, purported to have lived about the time of Constantine the Great. A terminus ante quem is yielded...
    2 KB (275 words) - 09:45, 22 November 2019
  • Theodosius of Alexandria may refer to: Theodosius of Alexandria (grammarian) (c. 3rd century CE), author of a work on inflection of Greek nouns and verbs...
    433 bytes (88 words) - 22:05, 25 August 2021
  • Thumbnail for Library of Alexandria
    Library of Alexandria in Alexandria, Egypt, was one of the largest and most significant libraries of the ancient world. The library was part of a larger...
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  • Theodorus the Atheist Theodosius of Alexandria (grammarian) Theodosius of Bithynia Theodosius' Spherics Theogenes Theognis Theognis of Megara Theogony Theomachy...
    151 KB (13,183 words) - 08:50, 3 June 2024
  • scholar and grammarian Didymus the Blind (313–398), ecclesiastical writer of Alexandria Didymus the Musician, music theorist in Alexandria of the 1st century...
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  • period grammarian, professor, and a priest of Zeus during the 4th and 5th centuries. Helladius was a professor of some distinction in Alexandria. In 391...
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  • place of the emperor in church affairs and in giving secular as well as church history. Socrates' teachers, noted in his prefaces, were the grammarians Helladius...
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  • Thumbnail for Tarnovo Literary School
    direction. Patriarch Theodosius of Tarnovo also had some credit to the establishment of the School. The school was established in the capital of the Bulgarian...
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  • Another, earlier, Horapollo alluded to by the Suda was a grammarian from Phanebytis, under Theodosius II (AD 408–450). To this Horapollo the Hieroglyphica...
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  • and translator Macrobius (fl. 5th century), Roman grammarian and philosopher (Ambrosius Theodosius Macrobius in later manuscripts) Ambrosius Moibanus...
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  • Eudocia, the wife of Emperor Theodosius II. He taught at Alexandria, Caesarea in Cappadocia and Constantinople. He was the author of a partly extant etymological...
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    rhetoric with a grammarian in Alexandria. It seems that he was converted to Christianity in Alexandria. After that, he shunned the pleasures of his day—theatre...
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  • Aelius Herodianus (category Ancient Greek grammarians)
    accents (περὶ τόνων), attributed to Arcadius of Antioch but compiled by a later grammarian, Theodosius of Byzantium, seems to be an extract from Herodian's...
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  • George Choiroboskos (category Grammarians from the Byzantine Empire)
    grammarian and deacon. Little is known about his life. He held the positions of deacon and chartophylax (keeper of archives) at the Patriarchate of Constantinople...
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  • Thumbnail for Antioch
    Antioch (redirect from History of Antioch)
    by a new tax levied by order of Theodosius I, and the city was punished by the loss of its metropolitan status. Theodosius placed Antioch under Constantinople's...
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  • Thumbnail for Flavia gens
    Theodosius, or Theodosius the Great, emperor of the east from AD 379 to 392, and sole emperor from 392 to 395. Flavius Magnus Maximus, commander of the...
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  • Thumbnail for Byzantine Empire
    moved the capital to Constantinople and legalised Christianity. Under Theodosius I (r. 379–395), Christianity became the state religion, and other religious...
    177 KB (19,528 words) - 04:35, 8 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Severus of Antioch
    in line with himself and Pope Theodosius I of Alexandria. Severus' fortunes were quickly overturned as Pope Agapetus I of Rome arrived at Constantinople...
    31 KB (3,177 words) - 08:35, 19 May 2024
  • of Symeon Logothete with the near-contemporary hagiographer Symeon Metaphrastes is far from certain. It has been misattributed to one Theodosius of Melitene...
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  • Thumbnail for Ephesus
    Ephesus (category History of İzmir Province)
    — criminal Zenodotus (fl. 280 BC) — grammarian and literary critic, first librarian of the Library of Alexandria Agasias (2nd century BC) — Greek sculptor...
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  • Leo the Mathematician (category Year of birth uncertain)
    Leo the Mathematician, the Grammarian or the Philosopher (Greek: Λέων ὁ Μαθηματικός or ὁ Φιλόσοφος, Léōn ho Mathēmatikós or ho Philósophos; c. 790 – after...
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  • Thumbnail for Kütahya
    Kütahya (redirect from History of Kütahya)
    of Panopolis, who had been prefect of the city of Constantinople, was sent there as bishop by Emperor Theodosius II (408-50), after four bishops of the...
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    and the grammarian John; the Caesarean authors and historians Procopius, Gelasius, Eusebius, and the theologican Origen; the hagiographer Cyril of Scythopolis;...
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  • Thumbnail for Eustathius of Thessalonica
    correspondences with Homeric scholia. Drawing on numerous extensive works of Alexandrian grammarians and critics and later commentators, they are a very important...
    11 KB (1,231 words) - 17:57, 3 December 2023
  • irrationality of the square root of two. c. 510 BC – Greece, Anaxagoras c. 500 BC – Indian grammarian Pānini writes the Astadhyayi, which contains the use of metarules...
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    reign of Theodosius II (d. 450 AD). Koine Greek had become the common language of the eastern Mediterranean and into Asia Minor after the conquests of Alexander...
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  • History in twenty-two volumes, written in Greek, dedicated to the Emperor Theodosius II, detailing events in the Western Roman Empire between 407 and 425....
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  • Thumbnail for Lychnapsia
    Lychnapsia (category Roman festivals of Isis)
    AD) to the Alexandrian grammarian Apollonius Dyscolus. Lychnapsia as a ritualized lighting of lamps was an "essential feature" of cult surrounding the Theos...
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    Roman Empire (redirect from Empire of rome)
    grammaticus or "grammarian" taught mainly Greek and Latin literature, with history, geography, philosophy or mathematics treated as explications of the text...
    248 KB (28,043 words) - 07:08, 8 June 2024
  • Thumbnail for Poetry of Sappho
    scholars in Alexandria. This may have been based on an Athenian text of her poems, or one from her native island of Lesbos. It is uncertain which of the Alexandrian...
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