Constantine Sathas
Photo in Hestia magazine, 1894
Born1842
Athens
Died25 May 1914(1914-05-25) (aged 71–72)
Paris
OccupationsHistorian, researcher

Constantine Sathas (Greek: Κωνσταντίνος Σάθας; Athens, 1842 – Paris, 25 May 1914)[1] was a Greek historian and researcher.

Sathas spent his life unearthing hitherto unknown material pertaining to the history of late medieval and early modern Greece that he later published. He researched archives in Greece, Constantinople (now Istanbul), Venice and Florence. In 1900, he moved to Paris, where he lived until his death.

Many of the numerous documents he brought to light still remain primary sources of information. It can be argued that his work was never fully appreciated and some of his views are regarded eccentric nowadays.[2] Yet, he carried out groundbreaking work and has been considered as the best historian of Greece in the 19th century.[3] He published the first editions of the Cypriot Medieval chronicles of Leontios Machairas and Georgios Boustronios.

Selected works

edit

In Greek

edit

In French

edit

In English

edit
edit

References

edit
  1. ^ R., S. (1914). "Constantin Sathas". Revue Archéologique. 23: 429–430. ISSN 0035-0737. JSTOR 41033737.
  2. ^ Siniossoglou, Niketas (2011). Radical Platonism in Byzantium. Cambridge University Press. pp. 50–51. ISBN 9781107013032. It is worth evoking here the pioneering theory of Konstantinos Sathas regarding the survival of pagan Hellenism within Byzantium. Sathas did not maintain that paganism ultimately shaped the Christian mysteries from inside, as Protestant and deist philosophers had done. Rather, Sathas, nowadays considered eccentric and very rarely (if at all) remembered by modern Byzantinists, argued in favour of a covert pagan movement operating within the Christian Empire and bowing to clerical hegemony while maintaining its own distinct identity.
  3. ^ Thompson, James Westfall; Holm, Bernard J. (1942). A History of Historical Writing. New York: Macmillan. p. 643. The best historian of Greece in the last century was Constantine Sathas

📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Galaxidi

a hill just outside the city, the Greek ethnographer and scholar Constantine Sathas discovered in 1864 a manuscript containing the “Chronicle of Galaxidi”

Albanoi

Chronicle corresponded to the term Albani(k/t)on (genitive of Albanitai). Constantine Sathas (1842-1912) who first recorded the discrepancy between different translations

Mercurio Bua

Italy and was published partially by C. Hopf and in its entirety by Constantine Sathas. It was written in 1519 when Koronaios was in Venice and refers to

Alipashiad

Alipashiad. The entire poem was published by the Greek historian Constantine Sathas in his volume Historical Disquisitions in 1870. Leake William Martin

Bua (tribe)

offspring of both Bua and Spata clans. According to the Greek historian Constantine Sathas, the surname Bua derived from the name of the river Buna in Albania

Patriarch Paisius of Alexandria

/ П. В. Гидулянов. - М.; Рязань : Атеист, 1930. - 176 с. / С. 172 Constantine Sathas, Νεοελληνική Φιλολογία: Βιογραφία των εν τοις γράμμασι διαλαμψάντων

Demetrius Ducas

intellectual legacy was delayed by a series of mistaken identifications. Constantine Sathas composed a brief biographical sketch of Ducas for his 1868 Neohellenic

List of early modern works on the Crusades

France {BnF Data}. "Konstantínos N. Sáthas (1842–1914)". Sathas, K. N. (1872). Bibliotheca graeca medii aevi. Athens. Sathas, K. N. (1880–1890). Mnēmeia Hellēnikēs