• Thumbnail for Isaac Casaubon
    Isaac Casaubon (/kəˈsɔːbən/; French: [kazobɔ̃]; 18 February 1559 – 1 July 1614) was a classical scholar and philologist, first in France and then later...
    21 KB (2,902 words) - 09:32, 17 October 2023
  • Casaubon /kəˈsɔːbən/ is a surname. Notable people with the surname include: Isaac Casaubon (1559–1614), French classical scholar Méric Casaubon (1599–1671)...
    649 bytes (122 words) - 03:54, 12 June 2022
  • Thumbnail for Méric Casaubon
    Meric Casaubon (14 August 1599 in Geneva – 14 July 1671 in Canterbury), son of Isaac Casaubon, was a French-English classical scholar. He was the first...
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  • American lead singer in Modest Mouse Isaac Casaubon (1559–1614), French-born English classical scholar and philologist Isaac of the Cells, Egyptian Christian...
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  • Thumbnail for Animula vagula blandula
    author of the Historia Augusta was disparaging but later authors such as Isaac Casaubon were more respectful. Animula vagula blandula Hospes comesque corporis...
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    around 1469. The first printed edition was published in 1516 in Venice. Isaac Casaubon, classical scholar and editor of Greek texts, provided the first critical...
    29 KB (3,539 words) - 00:19, 26 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Deipnosophistae
    publication of the Deipnosophistae in 1612 by the Classical scholar Isaac Casaubon. Browne was also the author of a Latin essay on Athenaeus. By the nineteenth...
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  • Thumbnail for Anachronism
    for example, the work of the 3rd-century philosopher Porphyry, of Isaac Casaubon (1559–1614), and of Richard Reitzenstein (1861–1931), all of whom succeeded...
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  • Thumbnail for Satire
    mythological figure of the satyr. In the 17th century, philologist Isaac Casaubon was the first to dispute the etymology of satire from satyr, contrary...
    125 KB (14,616 words) - 06:52, 26 April 2024
  • Leiden 1641 Athenaeus, Deipnosophistae or Banquet of the learned ed. Isaac Casaubon 1612 Epicurus Philosophy of, ed. Pierre Gassendi 2 vols. Leiden 1649...
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  • Peace Prize winner. Isaac Casaubon, scholar. Méric Casaubon (1599–1671), scholar, translator, Anglican minister, son of Isaac Casaubon. Pierre Courthial...
    324 KB (25,749 words) - 02:40, 15 April 2024
  • day after Michel Foucault died (June 25, 1984). Casaubon's name refers to classical scholar Isaac Casaubon and also evokes a scholar character in George...
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  • Thumbnail for Henri Estienne
    His daughter was married to Isaac Casaubon. His son Paul (born 1567) assumed control of the presses in Geneva with Casaubon but he fled to Paris from the...
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  • Thumbnail for Disciplina arcani
    century. The concept, however, was first proposed by another Calvinist, Isaac Casaubon, in 1614 as a way of explaining the absence of certain doctrines in...
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  • Thumbnail for Poets' Corner
    "Henry Francis Cary". Westminster Abbey. Retrieved 7 September 2022. "Isaac Casaubon". Westminster Abbey. Retrieved 7 September 2022. "Sir William Chambers"...
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  • Thumbnail for Aeneas Tacticus
    large number of historical illustrations. Aeneas was considered by Isaac Casaubon to have been a contemporary of Xenophon and identical with the Arcadian...
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    against smallpox Isaac Casaubon (1559–1614), a classical scholar and philologist Méric Casaubon (1599–1671), son of Isaac Casaubon, a French-English...
    154 KB (14,958 words) - 16:59, 27 April 2024
  • al-ʿĀmilī, founder of Isfahan School of Islamic Philosophy (d. 1621) 1559 – Isaac Casaubon, Swiss philologist and scholar (d. 1614) 1589 – Henry Vane the Elder...
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  • Thumbnail for Iolcus
    those of Isaac Casaubon's edition. ὁ τῆς Ἰωλκοῦ τόπος, Strabo. Geographica. Vol. ix. p.438. Page numbers refer to those of Isaac Casaubon's edition. Strabo...
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  • Thumbnail for Emerald Tablet
    vocabulary used with that of the Corpus Hermeticum (which had been proven by Isaac Casaubon in 1614 to date only from the 2nd or 3rd century AD), he affirms that...
    75 KB (7,943 words) - 14:36, 13 April 2024
  • Strabo. Geographica. Vol. viii. p.486. Page numbers refer to those of Isaac Casaubon's edition. Pliny. Naturalis Historia. Vol. 4.12.20. Callimachus, Aetia...
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  • century following its publication in 1612 by the Classical scholar Isaac Casaubon. Smith, William (1867), "Adrantus", in Smith, William (ed.), Dictionary...
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  • Thumbnail for Mark Pattison (academic)
    education, and began his researches into the lives of the philologist Isaac Casaubon and the historian Joseph Justus Scaliger, which occupied the remainder...
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  • Thumbnail for Latin
    rediscovered. Comprehensive versions of author's works were published by Isaac Casaubon, Joseph Scaliger and others. Nevertheless, despite the careful work...
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  • Marc'Antonio Ingegneri, Italian composer and educator (b. 1535) 1614 – Isaac Casaubon, French philologist and scholar (b. 1559) 1622 – William Parker, 4th...
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    Grafton and Joanna Weinberg, “I have always loved the Holy Tongue”: Isaac Casaubon, the Jews, and a Forgotten Chapter in Renaissance Scholarship (Cambridge:...
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  • Translation of Seneca the Younger's Troas See 1559 in poetry February 18 – Isaac Casaubon, Genevan classicist and church historian (died 1614) October 12 – Jacques...
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  • Library on Hebrew manuscripts. In 1609, the French Huguenot scholar Isaac Casaubon invited Jacob Barnet, an Italian Jew, to his home in Drury Lane, London...
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  • Thumbnail for Hermeticism
    to scour European monasteries for lost ancient writings. In 1614, Isaac Casaubon, a Swiss philologist, analyzed the Greek Hermetic texts for linguistic...
    54 KB (6,700 words) - 22:34, 13 April 2024
  • Thumbnail for Hermetica
    biblical flood. In the early seventeenth century, the classical scholar Isaac Casaubon (1559–1614) demonstrated that some of the Greek texts betrayed too recent...
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