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Greek East and Latin West

Greek East and Latin West are terms used to distinguish between the two parts of the Greco-Roman world and of medieval Christendom, specifically the eastern regions where Greek was the lingua franca (Greece, Anatolia, the southern Balkans, the Levant, and Egypt) and the western parts where Latin filled this role (Italy, Gaul, Hispania, North Africa, the northern Balkans, territories in Central Europe, and the British Isles).

Greek had spread as a result of previous Hellenization, whereas Latin was the official administrative language of the Roman state, stimulating Romanization. In the east, where both languages co-existed within the Roman administration for several centuries, the use of Latin ultimately declined as the role of Greek was further encouraged by administrative changes in the empire's structure between the 3rd and 7th centuries, which led to the split between the Eastern Roman Empire and the Western Roman Empire, the collapse of the latter, and failed attempts to restore unity by the former. This Greek–Latin divide continued with the East–West Schism of the Christian world during the Early Middle Ages.

Use with regard to the Roman Empire edit

 
The Roman Empire in 330 AD.

In the classical context, "Greek East" refers to the provinces and client states of the Roman Empire in which the lingua franca was primarily Greek.[citation needed]

This region included the whole Greek peninsula with some other northern parts in the Balkans, the provinces around the Black Sea, those of the Bosphorus, all of Asia Minor (in the loosest possible sense, to include Cappadocia and extending to Armenia Minor), Magna Graecia (southern part of the Italian peninsula and Sicily), and the other provinces along the eastern rim of the Mediterranean Sea (Judea, Syria, Cyrenaica and Egypt). These Roman provinces had been Greek colonies or Greek-ruled states during the Hellenistic period, i.e. until the Roman conquests.[citation needed]

At the start of late antiquity, beginning with the reorganization of the empire's provincial divisions during the reign of Diocletian (ruled 284–305), the concept of the Greek East developed to stand in contradistinction to the Latin West. Thereafter, Greek East refers to the Greek-speaking provinces mentioned above (after 395 mostly in the Greek-speaking Eastern Roman Empire) in contradistinction to the provinces in Western Europe, Italia (excluding the Catepanate of Italy, where they still spoke Greek) and Northwest Africa (after 395 in the Latin-speaking Western Roman Empire).[1][failed verification]

Use with regard to Christianity edit

"Greek East" and "Latin West" are terms used also to divide Chalcedonian Christianity into the Greek-speaking, Eastern Orthodox peoples of the Eastern Mediterranean Basin, centered on the Byzantine Empire, and the Latin-speaking Catholic peoples of Western Europe.[2][3] Here, Latin West applies to regions that were formerly part of the Western Roman Empire, specifically Italia, Gallia (Gaul), Hispania, Northwest Africa, and Britannia, but also to areas that had never been part of the Empire but which later came under the culture sphere of the Latin West, such as Magna Germania, Hibernia (Ireland), Caledonia (Scotland). In this sense, the term "Latin" came to refer to the liturgical and scholarly language of Western Europe, since many of these countries did not actually speak Latin.[citation needed]

Modern scholars agree that by the 12th century, theological debate (or disputatio) between Christians of the Greek East and Latin West was focused on three Christian doctrines: 'the so-called filioque controversy regarding the procession of the Holy Spirit, leavened or unleavened bread in the Eucharist, and the primacy of the pope.'[4] However, it is not known when or how this began.

British philosopher Philip Sherrard (1959) claimed that the cause of Christendom's split into a Greek East and a Latin West was differing conceptions of sacerdotium and regnum, leading the Orthodox Patriarchate in Constantinople to never lay claim to secular power, but submit to the Byzantine emperor and later the Ottoman sultan (supposedly the reason for the 'eastern submission to autocracy'), while the Catholic Papacy persistently laid claim to have authority over the secular princes of Western Europe (allegedly 'the roots of modern democracy').[5] E. Evans (1960) panned Sherrard's book, writing: '...it must be said that unless the obscurity of the writer's language has dulled the reader's intelligence, neither the Filioque clause nor the developments of modern international politics are really shown to depend on the western as opposed to the eastern, the Latin as opposed to the Greek, doctrine of God and of creation: the argument, if there is one, is per saltum, and need amount to no more than an a posteriori interpretation of historical facts in the light of preconceived ideas.'[5]

According to English theologian Andrew Louth (2007), the Byzantine/Roman Empire and the early Church constituted a multilingual and 'multi-cultural civilization' until the 7th century, but after a period of transition, which he dated from 681 (Third Council of Constantinople) to 1071 (Battle of Manzikert), Christendom had split into a "Greek East" and "Latin West", which he considered 'two Christian civilizations' in reference to Huntington's Clash of Civilizations thesis.[3] Louth primarily attributed this purported 'transition from multi-cultural Byzantium to Greek East and Latin West [to] the rise of Islam and the Arab destruction of the stability of the Mediterranean world in the seventh century.'[6] Nevertheless, the transition was a slow and complicated process with many factors rather than a single historic event, which 'set the two halves of Christianity on their gradually diverging tracks', as Byzantine literature professor Alexander Alexakis (2010) summarised Louth's analysis.[7] These included observations that the Byzantine church-state dualism remained intact after the Western Roman Empire's collapse, while bishops and eventually the pope in the West sometimes wielded secular power, but the Carolingian monarchs' renovatio also promoted theological thought at a time when the pope was embroiled in worldly affairs (8th–9th century), that the Byzantine Iconoclasm controversy caused 'the first rift between Rome and Constantinople', and that the simultaneous missionary efforts to convert the Slavs led to a 'second point of contention between Rome and Constantinople', especially in Bulgaria (9th–10th century).[7] Louth agreed with 'the prevailing (and more plausible) theory that assigns no particular importance to the events of 1054' (the East–West Schism) 'as far as the people of that era were concerned', and that the schism only became significant during the preliminaries to the 1245 and 1274 Councils of Lyon.[7]

The term "Greek" varies in how it is applied. In the most narrow sense, after the rise of the Roman Empire it is only applied to the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire.[8] Depending on the author it may also be applied to:

The term "Latin" has survived much longer as a unifying term for the West because the Latin language survived until relatively recently as a scholarly and liturgical language despite the fragmentation and religious changes in Western Europe. The Greek language, by contrast, died out somewhat quickly in the Arab lands, and the Orthodox Slavic nations never fully embraced the language despite their long religious affiliation with the Eastern Romans/Byzantines.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Cf. Fishwick, Duncan. The imperial cult in the Latin West: studies in the ruler cult of the Western provinces of the Roman Empire. BRILL, 2002.
  2. ^ Sherrard, Philip. The Greek East and the Latin West: a study in the Christian tradition. London: Oxford University Press, 1959; reprinted Limni [Greece]: Denise Harvey & Company, 1992 ISBN 960-7120-04-3.
  3. ^ a b Louth 2007, p. 3.
  4. ^ Brubaker 2018, p. 614.
  5. ^ a b Evans, E. (1960). "The Greek East and the Latin West. A Study in the Christian Tradition. By Philip Sherrard. O.U.P., 1959. Pp.202. 25s". Scottish Journal of Theology. 13 (2): 200–202. doi:10.1017/S0036930600052662. Retrieved 17 June 2022.
  6. ^ Louth 2007, p. 4.
  7. ^ a b c Alexakis, Alexander (2010). "Reviewed Work: Greek East and Latin West: The Church, AD 681–1071. (The Church in History, 3.) by Andrew Louth". Speculum. 85 (2): 425–427. doi:10.1017/S0038713410000473. JSTOR 27866892. Retrieved 17 June 2022.
  8. ^ "The Byzantine Empire" (in German). Retrieved 2018-08-18.

Bibliography edit

  • Brubaker, Jeff (2018). ""You are the Heretics!" Dialogue and Disputation between the Greek East and the Latin West after 1204". Medieval Encounters. 24 (5–6): 613–630. doi:10.1163/15700674-12340033. S2CID 166795372. Retrieved 17 June 2022.
  • Louth, Andrew (2007). Greek East and Latin West: The Church AD 691–1071. Crestwood, New York: St Vladimir's Seminary Press. p. 382. ISBN 9780881413205. Retrieved 17 June 2022.

greek, east, latin, west, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, j. 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 Greek East and Latin West news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2022 Learn how and when to remove this message Greek East and Latin West are terms used to distinguish between the two parts of the Greco Roman world and of medieval Christendom specifically the eastern regions where Greek was the lingua franca Greece Anatolia the southern Balkans the Levant and Egypt and the western parts where Latin filled this role Italy Gaul Hispania North Africa the northern Balkans territories in Central Europe and the British Isles Greek had spread as a result of previous Hellenization whereas Latin was the official administrative language of the Roman state stimulating Romanization In the east where both languages co existed within the Roman administration for several centuries the use of Latin ultimately declined as the role of Greek was further encouraged by administrative changes in the empire s structure between the 3rd and 7th centuries which led to the split between the Eastern Roman Empire and the Western Roman Empire the collapse of the latter and failed attempts to restore unity by the former This Greek Latin divide continued with the East West Schism of the Christian world during the Early Middle Ages Contents 1 Use with regard to the Roman Empire 2 Use with regard to Christianity 3 See also 4 References 5 BibliographyUse with regard to the Roman Empire edit nbsp The Roman Empire in 330 AD In the classical context Greek East refers to the provinces and client states of the Roman Empire in which the lingua franca was primarily Greek citation needed This region included the whole Greek peninsula with some other northern parts in the Balkans the provinces around the Black Sea those of the Bosphorus all of Asia Minor in the loosest possible sense to include Cappadocia and extending to Armenia Minor Magna Graecia southern part of the Italian peninsula and Sicily and the other provinces along the eastern rim of the Mediterranean Sea Judea Syria Cyrenaica and Egypt These Roman provinces had been Greek colonies or Greek ruled states during the Hellenistic period i e until the Roman conquests citation needed At the start of late antiquity beginning with the reorganization of the empire s provincial divisions during the reign of Diocletian ruled 284 305 the concept of the Greek East developed to stand in contradistinction to the Latin West Thereafter Greek East refers to the Greek speaking provinces mentioned above after 395 mostly in the Greek speaking Eastern Roman Empire in contradistinction to the provinces in Western Europe Italia excluding the Catepanate of Italy where they still spoke Greek and Northwest Africa after 395 in the Latin speaking Western Roman Empire 1 failed verification Use with regard to Christianity editFurther information East West Schism Greek East and Latin West are terms used also to divide Chalcedonian Christianity into the Greek speaking Eastern Orthodox peoples of the Eastern Mediterranean Basin centered on the Byzantine Empire and the Latin speaking Catholic peoples of Western Europe 2 3 Here Latin West applies to regions that were formerly part of the Western Roman Empire specifically Italia Gallia Gaul Hispania Northwest Africa and Britannia but also to areas that had never been part of the Empire but which later came under the culture sphere of the Latin West such as Magna Germania Hibernia Ireland Caledonia Scotland In this sense the term Latin came to refer to the liturgical and scholarly language of Western Europe since many of these countries did not actually speak Latin citation needed Modern scholars agree that by the 12th century theological debate or disputatio between Christians of the Greek East and Latin West was focused on three Christian doctrines the so called filioque controversy regarding the procession of the Holy Spirit leavened or unleavened bread in the Eucharist and the primacy of the pope 4 However it is not known when or how this began British philosopher Philip Sherrard 1959 claimed that the cause of Christendom s split into a Greek East and a Latin West was differing conceptions of sacerdotium and regnum leading the Orthodox Patriarchate in Constantinople to never lay claim to secular power but submit to the Byzantine emperor and later the Ottoman sultan supposedly the reason for the eastern submission to autocracy while the Catholic Papacy persistently laid claim to have authority over the secular princes of Western Europe allegedly the roots of modern democracy 5 E Evans 1960 panned Sherrard s book writing it must be said that unless the obscurity of the writer s language has dulled the reader s intelligence neither the Filioque clause nor the developments of modern international politics are really shown to depend on the western as opposed to the eastern the Latin as opposed to the Greek doctrine of God and of creation the argument if there is one is per saltum and need amount to no more than an a posteriori interpretation of historical facts in the light of preconceived ideas 5 According to English theologian Andrew Louth 2007 the Byzantine Roman Empire and the early Church constituted a multilingual and multi cultural civilization until the 7th century but after a period of transition which he dated from 681 Third Council of Constantinople to 1071 Battle of Manzikert Christendom had split into a Greek East and Latin West which he considered two Christian civilizations in reference to Huntington s Clash of Civilizations thesis 3 Louth primarily attributed this purported transition from multi cultural Byzantium to Greek East and Latin West to the rise of Islam and the Arab destruction of the stability of the Mediterranean world in the seventh century 6 Nevertheless the transition was a slow and complicated process with many factors rather than a single historic event which set the two halves of Christianity on their gradually diverging tracks as Byzantine literature professor Alexander Alexakis 2010 summarised Louth s analysis 7 These included observations that the Byzantine church state dualism remained intact after the Western Roman Empire s collapse while bishops and eventually the pope in the West sometimes wielded secular power but the Carolingian monarchs renovatio also promoted theological thought at a time when the pope was embroiled in worldly affairs 8th 9th century that the Byzantine Iconoclasm controversy caused the first rift between Rome and Constantinople and that the simultaneous missionary efforts to convert the Slavs led to a second point of contention between Rome and Constantinople especially in Bulgaria 9th 10th century 7 Louth agreed with the prevailing and more plausible theory that assigns no particular importance to the events of 1054 the East West Schism as far as the people of that era were concerned and that the schism only became significant during the preliminaries to the 1245 and 1274 Councils of Lyon 7 The term Greek varies in how it is applied In the most narrow sense after the rise of the Roman Empire it is only applied to the Eastern Roman Byzantine Empire 8 Depending on the author it may also be applied to Areas where the Greek language was the common scholarly and religious language during classical Roman times and the early Middle Ages including Syria Egypt Palestine etc citation needed Areas that have historically been in communion with the formerly Byzantine Eastern Orthodox Church which includes Russia and much of Eastern Europe but largely excludes Egypt Syria Armenia etc which largely opposed the influence of Constantinople having formed what are now called the Church of the East and Oriental Orthodoxy The Romanians spoke a Romance language but followed the Byzantine Church citation needed Areas that were heavily culturally influenced by the Byzantine Empire directly or indirectly during the Middle Ages including Eastern Europe and the Islamic Empires citation needed note among Muslim historians Greek and Roman are often categories specifically associated with Christians Though the Sultanate of Rome and later the Ottoman Empire would adopt Byzantine titles and describe themselves as rulers of Rome this was a geographic designation much in the same way that the Ghaznavids or Delhi Sultans would be known as rulers of Hindustan citation needed The term Latin has survived much longer as a unifying term for the West because the Latin language survived until relatively recently as a scholarly and liturgical language despite the fragmentation and religious changes in Western Europe The Greek language by contrast died out somewhat quickly in the Arab lands and the Orthodox Slavic nations never fully embraced the language despite their long religious affiliation with the Eastern Romans Byzantines citation needed See also editJirecek LineReferences edit Cf Fishwick Duncan The imperial cult in the Latin West studies in the ruler cult of the Western provinces of the Roman Empire BRILL 2002 Sherrard Philip The Greek East and the Latin West a study in the Christian tradition London Oxford University Press 1959 reprinted Limni Greece Denise Harvey amp Company 1992 ISBN 960 7120 04 3 a b Louth 2007 p 3 Brubaker 2018 p 614 a b Evans E 1960 The Greek East and the Latin West A Study in the Christian Tradition By Philip Sherrard O U P 1959 Pp 202 25s Scottish Journal of Theology 13 2 200 202 doi 10 1017 S0036930600052662 Retrieved 17 June 2022 Louth 2007 p 4 a b c Alexakis Alexander 2010 Reviewed Work Greek East and Latin West The Church AD 681 1071 The Church in History 3 by Andrew Louth Speculum 85 2 425 427 doi 10 1017 S0038713410000473 JSTOR 27866892 Retrieved 17 June 2022 The Byzantine Empire in German Retrieved 2018 08 18 Bibliography editBrubaker Jeff 2018 You are the Heretics Dialogue and Disputation between the Greek East and the Latin West after 1204 Medieval Encounters 24 5 6 613 630 doi 10 1163 15700674 12340033 S2CID 166795372 Retrieved 17 June 2022 Louth Andrew 2007 Greek East and Latin West The Church AD 691 1071 Crestwood New York St Vladimir s Seminary Press p 382 ISBN 9780881413205 Retrieved 17 June 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greek East and Latin West amp oldid 1171383016, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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