Scholia from Gregory of Nyssa’s Apologia in Hexaemeron in the Fourteenth-Century Slavonic Hexaemeron Collection
- Author(s): Lara Sels
- Subject(s): Language studies // Language and Literature Studies // Theoretical Linguistics // Studies of Literature // Historical Linguistics // Comparative Linguistics // Bulgarian Literature // South Slavic Languages // Greek Literature // Philology // Translation Studies //
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Published by: Institute for Literature BAS
- Print ISSN: 1312-238X
- Summary/Abstract:
The present article provides a critical edition of some of the scholia interpolated in the 14th-century South Slavonic translation of Basil of Caesarea’s Homiliae in Hexaemeron (CPG 2835), viz. six fragments from Gregory of Nyssa’s Apologia in Hexaemeron. These fragments correspond to marginalia in a number of Greek text witnesses from the 10th and 11th centuries. The Slavonic evidence is analysed in the light of the Greek manuscript tradition, viz. on the basis of the Apologia edition of H. R. Drobner (2009) and a collation of the Greek manuscripts Codex Florentinus Laurentianus gr. IV.27 (A3) and Codex Oxoniensis Bodleianus Baroccianus gr. 228 (E6).
Journal: Scripta & e-Scripta vol. 14-15, 2015
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Page Range: 95-120
No. of Pages: 26
Language: English - LINK CEEOL: https://www.ceeol.com/search/article-detail?id=417983
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Lara SelsPostdoctoral Collaborator, PhD KU Leuven, BelgiumDescription
Lara Sels is a slavist (1996) and a classicist (1998) who obtained her PhD in East European Languages and Cultures at the Ghent University, with an annotated edition of the Slavonic translation of Gregory of Nyssa’s On the Making of Man (2004). Between 1998 and 2014 she lectured in Old Church Slavonic at the Slavistics Department of the University of Ghent. Since 2012 she is employed at the Greek Studies Department of the KU Leuven, where she lectures in Byzantine art, and is responsible for the editorial work on the Series Graeca of the Corpus Christianorum. She is the author of several publications on the Slav reception of Byzantine culture.
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SUBJECT: Language studies // Language and Literature Studies // Theoretical Linguistics // Studies of Literature // Historical Linguistics // Comparative Linguistics // Bulgarian Literature // South Slavic Languages // Greek Literature // Philology // Translation Studies //KEYWORDS:
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