- Michael Choniates
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Michael Choniates (or Acominatus) (Greek: Μιχαήλ Χωνιάτης or Ἀκομινάτος) (c. 1140 – 1220), Byzantine writer and ecclesiastic, was born at Chonae (the ancient Colossae). At an early age he studied at Constantinople and was the pupil of Eustathius of Thessalonica. Around 1175 he was appointed archbishop of Athens. In 1204, he defended the Athenian Acropolis from attack by Leo Sgouros, holding out until the arrival of the Crusaders in 1205, to whom he surrendered the city.[1] After the establishment of Latin control, he retired to the island of Ceos. Around 1217 he moved again to the monastery of Vodonitsa near the Thermopylae, where he died.
Though he is known to classical scholars as the last possessor of complete versions of Callimachus' Hecale and Aitia,[2] he was a versatile writer, and composed homilies, speeches and poems, which, with his correspondence, throw considerable light upon the miserable condition of Attica and Athens at the time. His memorial to Alexios III Angelos on the abuses of Byzantine administration, the poetical lament over the degeneracy of Athens and the monodies on his brother Nicetas and Eustathius, archbishop of Thessalonica, deserve special mention.
Notes
References
- Edition of his works by Spyridon Lambros (1879-1880)
- Migne, Patrologia Graeca, cxl.
- Adolf Ellissen, Michael Akominatos (1846), containing several pieces with German translation
- Ferdinand Gregorovius, Geschichte der Stadt Athen im Mittelalter, i, (1889)
- George Finlay, History of Greece, iv. pp. 133-134 (1877).
- Thallon, C. A Medieval Humanist: Michael Akominatos (New Haven, 1923) (reprint New York, 1973).
- Stadtmüller, G. "Michael Choniates, Metropolit von Athen," Orientalia Christiana, 33,2 (1934), 125-325.
- Setton, K. M. "Athens in the Later Twelfth Century," Speculum, XIX (1944), 179-207.
- Anthony Kaldellis, "Michael Choniates: a classicist-bishop and his cathedral (1182–1205 AD)," in Idem, The Christian Parthenon: Classicism and Pilgrimage in Byzantine Athens (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2009), 145-162.
This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed (1911). "Michael Acominatus". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. http://www.1911encyclopedia.org/Michael_Acominatus.
Categories:- 1140s births
- 1220 deaths
- Byzantine writers
- Byzantine clergy
- Archbishops of Athens and All Greece
- 12th-century Eastern Orthodox bishops
- 13th-century Eastern Orthodox bishops
- 12th-century Byzantine people
- 13th-century Byzantine people
- Byzantine Anatolians
- Byzantine Athenians
- Byzantine people stubs
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