Choniates, Michael

Choniates, Michael

▪ Byzantine historian
erroneously called  Michael Acominatus  
born c. 1140, Chonae, Byzantine Empire [now in Turkey]
died c. 1220, Boudonitza, Byzantine Empire [near modern Thermopylai, Greece]

      Byzantine humanist scholar and archbishop of Athens whose extensive Classical literary works provide the principal documentary witness to the political turbulence of 13th-century Greece after its occupation by the Western Crusaders.

      Having studied at Constantinople (Istanbul) under the Classicist Eustathius of Thessalonica, Michael Choniates became metropolitan (senior archbishop) of Athens about 1175 and laboured for almost 30 years to reverse the material and moral deterioration of that tax-laden city. Amassing a collection of original and copied manuscripts, he advanced Classical learning by his own scholarship. At the fall of Athens to the Franks under Boniface of Montferrat in 1204, he refused to submit to the papacy and fled to the island of Ceos, where he lived until 1217, when he retired to the monastery of Prodromos in Boudonitza.

      Michael Choniates' writings comprise a variety of forms, including doctrinal conferences, eulogies, poetry, and letters. In iambic verse he mourned the intellectual destitution of 13th-century Athenian society and, by various rhetorical pieces, castigated the avarice and tyranny characterizing the local landlords and Byzantine bureaucracy. He also wrote laudatory odes to his brother Nicetas and to Emperor Isaac II Angelus (reigned 1185–95).

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • CHONIATES Michael — vide Michael …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

  • Choniates, Michael —    Metropolitan of Athens (qq.v.) from 1182 1204; pupil of Eustathios of Thessalonike and elder brother of historian Niketas Choniates (qq.v.). He resisted Leo Sgouros (q.v.) during the latter s siege of Athens, but the conquest of Constantinople …   Historical dictionary of Byzantium

  • 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.… …   Wikipedia

  • Choniates, Nicetas — ▪ Byzantine historian Nicetas also spelled  Niketas  born c. 1155, Chonae, Byzantine Empire [now in Turkey] died 1217, Nicaea, Empire of Nicaea [now İznik, Turkey]       Byzantine statesman, historian, and theologian. His chronicle of Byzantium s …   Universalium

  • Michael — I Mịcha|el,   einer der Erzengel; im Alten Testament (Daniel 12, 1), der Schutzengel Israels; im Neuen Testament der Bekämpfer des Teufels (Judasbrief 9) und des endzeitlichen Drachens (Offenbarung des Johannes 12, 17). Die jüdische und… …   Universal-Lexikon

  • Michael Choniates — Michael Akominatos (* um 1138 in Chonai; † ca. 1222 auf Keos), nach seinem Geburtsort genannt Choniates, war griechisch orthodoxer Metropolit von Athen. Er war der ältere Bruder des Historikers Niketas Choniates. Um 1138 geboren in Chonai, dem… …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • Choniates — may refer to: Niketas Choniates (c. 1155 – 1215 or 1216), Byzantine chronicler Michael Choniates (c. 1140 – 1220), Byzantine writer and ecclesiastic This page or section lists people with the surname Choniates. If an …   Wikipedia

  • Choniates — Choniates, das heißt aus (der Stadt) Chonai ist der Beiname von Michael Choniates, ca. 1138–1222, griechisch orthodoxer Metropolit von Athen Niketas Choniates, ca. 1150–1215, byzantinischer Historiker Diese Seite ist eine …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • MICHAEL Choniates — Metropolitanus Atheniensis, eruditione inclitus; A. C. 1210. Frater Nicetae historici. Diu in Zia, Cycladum una, exul vixit …   Hofmann J. Lexicon universale

  • Michael and Nicetas Akominatos —     Michael & Nicetas Akominatos     † Catholic Encyclopedia ► Michael & Nicetas Akominatos     Michael (d. 1215) and Nicetas (d. 1206); also known as Choniates, from their native city, Chonia (the Colossae of St. Paul).     Two famous Greeks of… …   Catholic encyclopedia

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