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Chapter 12 - Greek

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 August 2022

Mark Chinca
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Christopher Young
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
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Summary

Scholars since the nineteenth century have consistently divided Byzantine textual production into two distinct groups, ‘learned’ and ‘vernacular’, of which the latter was equated with the western vernaculars. The earliest longer texts in this ‘vernacular’ idiom appear in the twelfth century and became the beginning of Modern Greek (national) literature, while Byzantine ‘learned’ texts were left in a literary no-man’s land. The chapter criticizes this narrative by presenting and discussing the evidence from school practice in the twelfth century, where the vernacular idiom was part of learning Greek, and was used at the imperial court written by highly educated scholar-poets, such as Theodore Prodromos. In this sense, there was no beginning of Greek as vernacular in the twelfth century. Only in the later fourteenth century do we find a new textual production outside Byzantine territory that develops new forms of poetry including dialectal idioms. In this sense, vernacular Greek textual production does not have one beginning with a teleological ‘development’ towards the late fifteenth century and the end of Byzantium but, rather, two beginnings signalling two phases in the production of vernacular literature, one medieval and one early modern.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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