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Adamantios Korais

Adamantios Korais or Koraïs (Greek: Ἀδαμάντιος Κοραῆς [aðaˈmandi.os koraˈis]; Latin: Adamantius Coraes; French: Adamance Coray; 27 April 1748 – 6 April 1833) was a Greek scholar credited with laying the foundations of modern Greek literature and a major figure in the Greek Enlightenment. His activities paved the way for the Greek War of Independence and the emergence of a purified form of the Greek language, known as Katharevousa. Encyclopædia Britannica asserts that "his influence on the modern Greek language and culture has been compared to that of Dante on Italian and Martin Luther on German".[1]

Adamantios Korais
Ἀδαμάντιος Κοραῆς
Adamantios Korais (1748–1833)
Born(1748-04-27)27 April 1748
Died6 April 1833(1833-04-06) (aged 84)
EducationUniversity of Montpellier
(MBBS, 1786; MD, 1787)
EraAge of Enlightenment
SchoolLiberalism, Modern Greek Enlightenment
Main interests
Political philosophy, philology, history, freedom of religion, separation of church and state, Greek language, Greek Independence
Signature

Life and views Edit

Korais was born in Smyrna, in 1748. His father Ioannis, of Chian descent, was demogérontas in Smyrna; a seat similar to the prokritoi of mainland Greece, but elected by the Greek community of the town and not imposed by the Ottomans.

 
Residence of Korais in Amsterdam

He was exceptionally passionate about philosophy, literacy and linguistics and studied greatly throughout his youth. He initially studied in his hometown, Smyrna, where he graduated from the Evangelical Greek School.[2]

After his school years, he lived for a while in Amsterdam as a merchant, but soon he decided that he wanted to study in a university. He studied also the Hebrew, Dutch, French and English languages, apart from his knowledge of ancient Greek and Latin.

Korais studied at the school of medicine of the University of Montpellier from 1782 to 1787. His 1786 diploma thesis was entitled Pyretologiae Synopsis, while his 1787 doctoral thesis was entitled Medicus Hippocraticus.[3]

He traveled to Paris where he would continue his enthusiasm for knowledge. There he decided to translate ancient Greek authors and produced thirty volumes of those translations, being one of the first modern Greek philologists and publishers of ancient Greek literature.

After 1788 he was to spend most of his life as an expatriate in Paris. As classical scholar, Korais was repelled by the Byzantine influence on Greek society and was a fierce critic of the lack of education amongst the clergy and their subservience to the Ottoman Empire, although he conceded it was the Orthodox Church that preserved the national identity of Greeks.

Korais believed Western Europe was the heir of the ancient Greek civilization, which had to be transmitted to the modern Greeks through education. Additionally, he advocated the restoration and use of the term "Hellene" (Έλληνας) or "Graikos" (Γραικός) as an ethnonym for the Greeks, in the place of Romiós, that was seen negatively by him.

While in Paris, he was witness to the French Revolution. He was influenced by the revolutionary and liberal sentiments of his age. He admired Thomas Jefferson; and exchanged political and philosophical thoughts with the American statesman. A typical man of the Enlightenment, Korais encouraged wealthy Greeks to open new libraries and schools throughout Greece. Korais believed that education would ensure not only the achievement of independence but also the establishment of a proper constitution for the new liberated Greek state. He envisioned a democratic Greece, recapturing the glory of the Golden Age of Pericles.

Korais died in Paris aged 84 soon after publishing the first volume of his autobiography. In 1877, his remains were sent to Greece, to be buried there.

Publications Edit

 
Cover from his "Salpisma Polemistirion" (1801)

Korais's most lasting contributions were literary. Those who were instrumental in publishing, and presenting his work to the public were merchants from Chios. He felt eternally grateful to these merchants, since without them, it would have been financially impossible for him to publish his works. These works included Strabo in Greek, another on Marcus Aurelius, his translation of Herodotus, the translation of the Iliad, and his main literary work, the seventeen volumes of the "Library of Greek Literature".

His political writing begins with the publication at the opening of the nineteenth century of Asma Polemistirion ("War Chant") and Salpisma Polemistirion ("Military Bugal Call"), celebrating the presence of Greek troops fighting alongside the French in Egypt. Earlier he had confronted with his Adelphiki Didaskalia the Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem for urging the Sultan's Christian subjects (with the religious brochure Patriki Didaskalia) to support the Ottomans in the war against the "atheistic" French. On contrary, he made a call to the Greeks to fight beside the French, "who have the military virtue of the ancient Greeks", against the Ottoman tyranny.

Korais went on to publish in 1803 his Report on the Present State of Civilization in Greece, based on a series of lectures he had given in Paris, extolling the link between the rise of a new Greek mercantile class and the advance of the Greek Enlightenment or Diafotismos. In What should we Greeks do in the Present Circumstances?, a work of 1805, he tried to win his compatriots over to Napoleon and away from the cause of their Russian co-religionists. In later years, though, his enthusiasm for the French Emperor diminished, and he ended by referring to him as the 'tyrant of tyrants.'

Away from contemporary politics, Korais did much to revive the idea of Greece with the creation of the Hellenic Library, devoted to new editions of some of the classic texts, starting with Homer in 1805. Over the following twenty years many others appeared, with lengthy prefaces by Korais entitled 'Impromptu Reflections', with his views on political, educational and linguistic matters. Although the broad mass of the Greek people was beyond his reach, he played an important part in the shaping of a new consciousness among the intelligentsia, which was to play a part in the creation of a new national movement.

With the breakout of the Greek revolution in 1821, he was too old to join the struggle. However his house in Paris became a centre for informations, meetings among the Parisian Greeks and financial aid. He wrote also many letters advising the revolutionaries. Initially a supporter of Kapodistrias, finally he opposed his policies.

On religion Edit

Korais was a Greek Orthodox but also a critic of many practices of the Orthodox church. He was a fierce critic of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, considering it a useful tool in the hands of the Ottomans against the Greek independence. So, later, he was one of the supporters of the new established Church of Greece.

He was also critic of the monasticism, the lack of education in the clergy, and practices like that of the "Holy Fire". He was a supporter of religious freedom, empiricism, rationalism and tolerance. He set himself in opposition to some metaphysical ideals of Greek custom and sought to mould Greek Orthodoxy towards a more syncretic religious basis, in order to bring it under the auspices of liberal thought and government.

On Greek language Edit

 
Cenotaph of Korais; Montparnasse Cemetery.

One of his most significant accomplishments was his contribution to the redefining of the Greek language. The Greeks were dispersed so widely across Europe, people who served several masters. He decided to purge the language of foreign elements (such as Turkish, but also Western words and phrases).

During his time, the Greek language question was already in discussion between the "archaists" and proponents of a simpler language. Another problem was that a common accepted form of Modern Greek (what came to be much later Demotic -language of the people- or Standard Modern Greek) didn't exist, as in every region Greek people were speaking different idioms.

Korais decided to take the "middle path" and cleanse the language from elements that he considered to be too "vulgar". This effort ultimately led to his publishing of Atakta, the first modern Greek dictionary.

Korais' vision led also to the creation and adoption of "Katharevousa" (pure) by future scholars and the Greek state, which was an artificial language based on the ecclesiastical language used by the Greek Orthodox Church, close to the Koine Greek.

Influence on the Greek constitutional and legal system Edit

 
Statue of Korais in Athens (work of Ioannis Kossos).
 
His grave at the First Cemetery of Athens

Unknown to most, Korais held passionate views on how the legal system should function in a democracy (views which of course, were greatly influenced by the French Enlightenment, closer to Montesquieu than to Rousseau) and managed to have a great, albeit indirect, impact on the Constitutions of the Greek Revolution, but also, primarily, on the Constitution or Syntagma created after the end of the Greek Revolution. This element holds significant importance if one takes into consideration the fact that these meta-Revolution Constitutions still, to the present day, form the basis of the Greek Constitution and the philosophy on which the guiding principles of the Greek legal and judicial system are rooted in.

This influence Korais exercised on Greek Law, was due to a personal relationship the intellectual formed with another Greek intellectual, the legal scholar of international repute N. I. Saripolos, who, after the Greek Revolution, became the founding father of Greek Law and the "author" of the Greek Constitution. Proof of this relationship and of the strong and progressive views Korais held on how the legal system of the new Greek state should be formed, is based on correspondence exchanged between the two men, during a long period of time, beginning before the Greek Revolution. These letters which manifest the influence the older intellectual (Korais) had on the then aspiring lawmaker Saripolos, are in the possession of the archives of the Greek National Library, were discovered and brought to academic light, in 1996, by a Law School student, researching a project sponsored by the Faculty of Law of the University of Athens and the National Academy for Constitutional Research and Public Law (adjacent to the University of Athens). The ensuing thesis was published.[4]

Legacy Edit

Korais was declared Pater Patriae ("Pateras tis Patridos") by the revolutionaries at the Third National Assembly at Troezen. Korais' portrait was depicted on the reverse of the Greek 100 banknote of 1978–2001.[5] Many streets all over Greece are named after him, while his archive can be found in Korais Library in Chios (town). "Korais" is also the name of a vessel of Zante Ferries.

References Edit

  1. ^ "Adamantios Korais - biography - Greek scholar". Encyclopædia Britannica.
  2. ^ Trencsényi, Balázs; Kopeček, Michal (2006). Discourses of collective identity in Central and Southeast Europe (1770–1945): texts and commentaries. Central European University Press. p. 141. ISBN 978-963-7326-52-3.
  3. ^ Ioannis Taifakos, "Korais and Latin" in Proceedings of Korais Congress and Chios (Chios 11–15 May 1983), I, Athens: Omirion Pnevmatikon Kentron Chiou, 1984, pp. 67–89, esp. p. 70
  4. ^ Aμαλία Νεγρεπόντη, "Ν.Ι. Σαρίπολου "Περί της Δικαστικής Εξουσίας"" 24 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine, "Εφαρμογές Δημοσίου Δικαίου", Τεύχος1/1996
  5. ^ Bank of Greece 28 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine. Drachma Banknotes & Coins: 100 drachmas 5 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine. – Retrieved 27 March 2009.

Further reading Edit

  • Chaconas, Stephen George. Adamantios Korais; A Study in Greek Nationalism. Studies in history, economics and public law, no. 490. New York: Columbia University Press, 1942.
  • Βίος Αδαμαντίου Κοραή συγγραφείς παρά του ιδίου (in Greek, Korais' autobiography)

External links Edit

  • Koraes Library in Chios, blog

adamantios, korais, help, expand, this, article, with, text, translated, from, corresponding, article, greek, click, show, important, translation, instructions, machine, translation, like, deepl, google, translate, useful, starting, point, translations, transl. You can help expand this article with text translated from the corresponding article in Greek Click show for important translation instructions Machine translation like DeepL or Google Translate is a useful starting point for translations but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate rather than simply copy pasting machine translated text into the English Wikipedia Consider adding a topic to this template there are already 335 articles in the main category and specifying topic will aid in categorization Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low quality If possible verify the text with references provided in the foreign language article You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing Greek Wikipedia article at el Adamantios Korahs see its history for attribution You should also add the template Translated el Adamantios Korahs to the talk page For more guidance see Wikipedia Translation This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Adamantios Korais news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2009 Learn how and when to remove this template message Adamantios Korais or Korais Greek Ἀdamantios Koraῆs adaˈmandi os koraˈis Latin Adamantius Coraes French Adamance Coray 27 April 1748 6 April 1833 was a Greek scholar credited with laying the foundations of modern Greek literature and a major figure in the Greek Enlightenment His activities paved the way for the Greek War of Independence and the emergence of a purified form of the Greek language known as Katharevousa Encyclopaedia Britannica asserts that his influence on the modern Greek language and culture has been compared to that of Dante on Italian and Martin Luther on German 1 Adamantios KoraisἈdamantios KoraῆsAdamantios Korais 1748 1833 Born 1748 04 27 27 April 1748Smyrna Ottoman EmpireDied6 April 1833 1833 04 06 aged 84 ParisEducationUniversity of Montpellier MBBS 1786 MD 1787 EraAge of EnlightenmentSchoolLiberalism Modern Greek EnlightenmentMain interestsPolitical philosophy philology history freedom of religion separation of church and state Greek language Greek IndependenceSignature Contents 1 Life and views 2 Publications 3 On religion 4 On Greek language 5 Influence on the Greek constitutional and legal system 6 Legacy 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksLife and views EditKorais was born in Smyrna in 1748 His father Ioannis of Chian descent was demogerontas in Smyrna a seat similar to the prokritoi of mainland Greece but elected by the Greek community of the town and not imposed by the Ottomans nbsp Residence of Korais in AmsterdamHe was exceptionally passionate about philosophy literacy and linguistics and studied greatly throughout his youth He initially studied in his hometown Smyrna where he graduated from the Evangelical Greek School 2 After his school years he lived for a while in Amsterdam as a merchant but soon he decided that he wanted to study in a university He studied also the Hebrew Dutch French and English languages apart from his knowledge of ancient Greek and Latin Korais studied at the school of medicine of the University of Montpellier from 1782 to 1787 His 1786 diploma thesis was entitled Pyretologiae Synopsis while his 1787 doctoral thesis was entitled Medicus Hippocraticus 3 He traveled to Paris where he would continue his enthusiasm for knowledge There he decided to translate ancient Greek authors and produced thirty volumes of those translations being one of the first modern Greek philologists and publishers of ancient Greek literature After 1788 he was to spend most of his life as an expatriate in Paris As classical scholar Korais was repelled by the Byzantine influence on Greek society and was a fierce critic of the lack of education amongst the clergy and their subservience to the Ottoman Empire although he conceded it was the Orthodox Church that preserved the national identity of Greeks Korais believed Western Europe was the heir of the ancient Greek civilization which had to be transmitted to the modern Greeks through education Additionally he advocated the restoration and use of the term Hellene Ellhnas or Graikos Graikos as an ethnonym for the Greeks in the place of Romios that was seen negatively by him While in Paris he was witness to the French Revolution He was influenced by the revolutionary and liberal sentiments of his age He admired Thomas Jefferson and exchanged political and philosophical thoughts with the American statesman A typical man of the Enlightenment Korais encouraged wealthy Greeks to open new libraries and schools throughout Greece Korais believed that education would ensure not only the achievement of independence but also the establishment of a proper constitution for the new liberated Greek state He envisioned a democratic Greece recapturing the glory of the Golden Age of Pericles Korais died in Paris aged 84 soon after publishing the first volume of his autobiography In 1877 his remains were sent to Greece to be buried there Publications Edit nbsp Cover from his Salpisma Polemistirion 1801 Korais s most lasting contributions were literary Those who were instrumental in publishing and presenting his work to the public were merchants from Chios He felt eternally grateful to these merchants since without them it would have been financially impossible for him to publish his works These works included Strabo in Greek another on Marcus Aurelius his translation of Herodotus the translation of the Iliad and his main literary work the seventeen volumes of the Library of Greek Literature His political writing begins with the publication at the opening of the nineteenth century of Asma Polemistirion War Chant and Salpisma Polemistirion Military Bugal Call celebrating the presence of Greek troops fighting alongside the French in Egypt Earlier he had confronted with his Adelphiki Didaskalia the Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem for urging the Sultan s Christian subjects with the religious brochure Patriki Didaskalia to support the Ottomans in the war against the atheistic French On contrary he made a call to the Greeks to fight beside the French who have the military virtue of the ancient Greeks against the Ottoman tyranny Korais went on to publish in 1803 his Report on the Present State of Civilization in Greece based on a series of lectures he had given in Paris extolling the link between the rise of a new Greek mercantile class and the advance of the Greek Enlightenment or Diafotismos In What should we Greeks do in the Present Circumstances a work of 1805 he tried to win his compatriots over to Napoleon and away from the cause of their Russian co religionists In later years though his enthusiasm for the French Emperor diminished and he ended by referring to him as the tyrant of tyrants Away from contemporary politics Korais did much to revive the idea of Greece with the creation of the Hellenic Library devoted to new editions of some of the classic texts starting with Homer in 1805 Over the following twenty years many others appeared with lengthy prefaces by Korais entitled Impromptu Reflections with his views on political educational and linguistic matters Although the broad mass of the Greek people was beyond his reach he played an important part in the shaping of a new consciousness among the intelligentsia which was to play a part in the creation of a new national movement With the breakout of the Greek revolution in 1821 he was too old to join the struggle However his house in Paris became a centre for informations meetings among the Parisian Greeks and financial aid He wrote also many letters advising the revolutionaries Initially a supporter of Kapodistrias finally he opposed his policies On religion EditKorais was a Greek Orthodox but also a critic of many practices of the Orthodox church He was a fierce critic of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople considering it a useful tool in the hands of the Ottomans against the Greek independence So later he was one of the supporters of the new established Church of Greece He was also critic of the monasticism the lack of education in the clergy and practices like that of the Holy Fire He was a supporter of religious freedom empiricism rationalism and tolerance He set himself in opposition to some metaphysical ideals of Greek custom and sought to mould Greek Orthodoxy towards a more syncretic religious basis in order to bring it under the auspices of liberal thought and government On Greek language Edit nbsp Cenotaph of Korais Montparnasse Cemetery One of his most significant accomplishments was his contribution to the redefining of the Greek language The Greeks were dispersed so widely across Europe people who served several masters He decided to purge the language of foreign elements such as Turkish but also Western words and phrases During his time the Greek language question was already in discussion between the archaists and proponents of a simpler language Another problem was that a common accepted form of Modern Greek what came to be much later Demotic language of the people or Standard Modern Greek didn t exist as in every region Greek people were speaking different idioms Korais decided to take the middle path and cleanse the language from elements that he considered to be too vulgar This effort ultimately led to his publishing of Atakta the first modern Greek dictionary Korais vision led also to the creation and adoption of Katharevousa pure by future scholars and the Greek state which was an artificial language based on the ecclesiastical language used by the Greek Orthodox Church close to the Koine Greek Influence on the Greek constitutional and legal system Edit nbsp Statue of Korais in Athens work of Ioannis Kossos nbsp His grave at the First Cemetery of AthensUnknown to most Korais held passionate views on how the legal system should function in a democracy views which of course were greatly influenced by the French Enlightenment closer to Montesquieu than to Rousseau and managed to have a great albeit indirect impact on the Constitutions of the Greek Revolution but also primarily on the Constitution or Syntagma created after the end of the Greek Revolution This element holds significant importance if one takes into consideration the fact that these meta Revolution Constitutions still to the present day form the basis of the Greek Constitution and the philosophy on which the guiding principles of the Greek legal and judicial system are rooted in This influence Korais exercised on Greek Law was due to a personal relationship the intellectual formed with another Greek intellectual the legal scholar of international repute N I Saripolos who after the Greek Revolution became the founding father of Greek Law and the author of the Greek Constitution Proof of this relationship and of the strong and progressive views Korais held on how the legal system of the new Greek state should be formed is based on correspondence exchanged between the two men during a long period of time beginning before the Greek Revolution These letters which manifest the influence the older intellectual Korais had on the then aspiring lawmaker Saripolos are in the possession of the archives of the Greek National Library were discovered and brought to academic light in 1996 by a Law School student researching a project sponsored by the Faculty of Law of the University of Athens and the National Academy for Constitutional Research and Public Law adjacent to the University of Athens The ensuing thesis was published 4 Legacy EditKorais was declared Pater Patriae Pateras tis Patridos by the revolutionaries at the Third National Assembly at Troezen Korais portrait was depicted on the reverse of the Greek 100 banknote of 1978 2001 5 Many streets all over Greece are named after him while his archive can be found in Korais Library in Chios town Korais is also the name of a vessel of Zante Ferries References Edit Adamantios Korais biography Greek scholar Encyclopaedia Britannica Trencsenyi Balazs Kopecek Michal 2006 Discourses of collective identity in Central and Southeast Europe 1770 1945 texts and commentaries Central European University Press p 141 ISBN 978 963 7326 52 3 Ioannis Taifakos Korais and Latin in Proceedings of Korais Congress and Chios Chios 11 15 May 1983 I Athens Omirion Pnevmatikon Kentron Chiou 1984 pp 67 89 esp p 70 Amalia Negreponth N I Saripoloy Peri ths Dikastikhs E3oysias Archived 24 November 2011 at the Wayback Machine Efarmoges Dhmosioy Dikaioy Teyxos1 1996 Bank of Greece Archived 28 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine Drachma Banknotes amp Coins 100 drachmas Archived 5 October 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 27 March 2009 Further reading EditChaconas Stephen George Adamantios Korais A Study in Greek Nationalism Studies in history economics and public law no 490 New York Columbia University Press 1942 Bios Adamantioy Korah syggrafeis para toy idioy in Greek Korais autobiography External links Edit nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Coraes Adamantios nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Adamantios Korais Koraes Library in Chios Greece webpage Koraes Library in Chios blog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Adamantios Korais amp oldid 1168975970, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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