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The Stichoi diaphoroi, or Various verses, by the 11th century Byzantine poet Christophoros Mitylenaios, are a collection of originally 2856 verses, divided over 145 poems, handed down in 40 manuscripts. Set in chronological order, they treat a wide range of persons and subjects: emperors and imperial dignitaries, patriarchs and other religious figures such as saints and Church Fathers, family members and friends, edifices, icons, statues and other works of art, scenes taken from the day to day life in Constantinople (circus, religious feasts, traditions), and themes concerning nature along with panegyrics and elegies, riddles and satires. The Various verses collection was first published in 1887 in Rome by Antonio Rocchi. Rocchi's edition was based mainly on manuscripts G and V and showed numerous errors, both in the Greek text and in the accompanying commentary. In 1903 Eduard Kurtz provided a new edition in Leipzig under the title Die Gedichte des Christophoros Mitylenaios based on 25 manuscripts. More poems were discovered later. Marc De Groote provides a new scholarly edition in this volume, based on his researches in a total of 40 manuscripts and providing a four-part apparatus of source citations, parallels, manuscript sources and textual variants.
Classical Greek literature --- Medieval Greek language --- Christophoros, --- Byzantine Empire --- Empire byzantin --- History --- Poetry --- Civilization --- Religious life and customs --- Histoire --- Poésie --- Civilisation --- Vie religieuse --- Poésie --- Orthodox Eastern Church --- Early works to 1800 --- Christian poetry [Byzantine ] --- Christian saints --- Cult --- To 1500 --- Byzantine literature --- History and criticism --- Christian poetry [Greek ] --- 527-1081 --- Poetry.
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