Descriptio Sanctae Sophiae. Descriptio Ambonis

Front Cover
Walter de Gruyter, Mar 29, 2011 - Philosophy - 211 pages

The two poems Descriptio S. Sophiae and Descriptio Ambonis of Paul the Silentiary, composed for the inauguration (562 AD) of the church of St. Sophia (Istanbul) after its partial rebuilding, are an invaluable source for the history of Byzantine arts and a beautiful piece of late Greek poetry. Silentiary's poems respectively describe the church and its (now lost) pulpit. The Descriptio S. Sophiae also contains a lavish praise of emperor Justinian and of the patriarch Eutichius. De Stefani’s edition is based on a collation of the witness of the text, Heid. Pal. gr. 23, and takes into account all previous bibliography. Some corrupted passages of the poems have been emendated, the few false readings still present in the text printed by the last, authoritative editor, P. Friedländer (1912), have been corrected.

 

Selected pages

Contents

Descriptio Sanctae Sophiae
1
Descriptio Ambonis
72
Codicis Palatini ortographia et menda leviora
89
Index locorum similium et in apparatu laudatorum
91
Index verborum
123
Copyright

Other editions - View all

About the author (2011)

Claudio De Stefani, Seconda Università di Napoli, Italien.